![]() ![]() Once mounted, double-click the VMware Fusion icon to begin the install process. Step 3: Double-click the VMware-Fusion.dmg found in ~/Downloads to mount the image. Step 2: Under the License and Downloads tab, click the Manually Download button under the VMware Fusion Player binaries section. Once you do, then register for a Personal Use License. In order to Download VMware Fusion Player and utilize the personal use license, you’ll need to create and/or login with a VMware account. ![]() Step 1: Visit the VMware Fusion Player 13 page. Install Windows 11 for ARM using VMware Fusion Player You may also completely uninstall Parallels Desktop for Mac if you don’t plan on further using it. Optional: You can delete the ~/Parallels folder and its contents after the ISO is downloaded if you’d like to save space. … but that name of your ISO may be different depending on when you perform the download. Note: In my example, the Windows 11 for ARM ISO is named:Ģ_release_svc_refresh_CLIENTCONSUMER_RET_A64FRE_en-us.iso Then Click Windows 11 in the menu bar and select Quit Windows 11 to stop the install and close Parallels. Step 7: Confirm that the Windows 11 for ARM64 ISO is in the ~/Downloads folder on your Mac. Since we’re only using Parallels to facilitate the Window 11 for ARM64 ISO download, you’ll want to stop the installation. Step 6: Once the Windows 11 for ARM download is completed, the download will validate, and Windows Setup will start automatically to attempt the install. Click the blue Install Windows button in the bottom right-hand corner to begin the download of the Windows 11 for ARM64 ISO. Step 5: After a brief initialization process, Parallels will start and prompt you to download and install Windows 11. You’ll first be prompted to enter your administrator password to continue. The Parallels Desktop 18 application will then download and Install. Step 4: Uncheck Participate in Customer Experience Program (optional) on the EULA pop-up, and click Accept. Step 3: Double-click Install Parallels Desktop and click Open. Step 2: Open your Mac’s Downloads folder, and mount the image by clicking on Install Parallels Desktop.dmg Step 1: Visit the Parallels Desktop for Mac installer page and click Download Free Trial. People should know upfront that they can’t expect anything and assume they will run in to sometimes unsolvable issues.Subscribe to 9to5mac on YouTube for more videos There is nothing wrong with being a non general user OS. Linux for years had the reputation that you could do anything, if a developer wanted to write the code and users wanted to manually edit configuration files and debug syslog and messages to discover what went wrong. That kept linux small until organisations like Ubuntu or Gnome or KDE decided that users only come when all the basics are neatly implemented and configurable. They will discover, they can’t reach their NAS, conclude it doesn’t work and move on. My considerations on “some developer in time will update etc”Īssuming that “some developer, in time will implement a general user feature” is what, imo, keeps systems away from the general users. Reality check: will general users ever find and use Haiku? It really depends on “what do you want Haiku too be?” Haiku is in beta stage, thats why I did not expect perfection. Or something.Īs long as your SMB servers will do SMB 1, that is. Or make the config file automatically add it to cache. It is suboptimal, but it works until someone can fix it. Or, maybe, make a cron job or something that automatically does it. After that, you’ll have to re-edit that file (or, do as I do, which is make a copy of the modified cache file and then copy it back to it’s original name after two hours). You can hold it off for a max of 120 minutes. How long that takes is up to the setting in Network Preferences. Then, when you click on the SMB Network icon, and then Workgroup, the shares will appear and be usable. It is to open config/settings/fusesmb/fusesmb.cache and add a line for your servers like: There’s a way around this, but it is crappy. “wsdd” is a Web Service Discovery host daemon. I say “might” work because I have a NAS that is running wsdd2 and it still isn’t picked up by Windows, macOS, or Haiku. Wsdd is a Python script there’s also a wsdd2 that is C or C++. If it’s possible, you can try installing wsdd on your servers, which might work. ![]() In fact, I’m not sure Samba even advertises at all, anymore. If your SMB servers are fairly recent, even enabling SMB1 won’t be enough for FuseSMB to see it, because the method of broadcasting shares has changed. And here we go…įuseSMB only supports SMB 1, so you’ll need to check your SMB servers and make sure SMB 1 is enabled, if possible. This is the only thing I can chime in on. Perhaps it needs support for newer SMB versions? My home is filled with SaMBa daemons sharing disks to windows/mac and linux. ![]()
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