• progress_activity cloud_sync

    Reconnection to the server…

    Movim cannot talk with the server, please try again later

  • back_to_tab fullscreen tile_small dialpad mic videocam switch_camera screen_share

    mic_none No sound detected from your microphone

  • Register Login

    Movim

    movim.chatterboxtown.us


  • label

    taglinux

    • Ar chevron_right

      Parallels Desktop gains “really slow” support for x86 OSes on Apple Silicon

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 14 January 2025

    Virtualization software like Parallels and VMware Fusion give Mac owners the ability to run Windows and Linux on top of macOS, but for Apple Silicon Macs, that support was limited to the Arm-based versions of those operating systems. And while Windows and Linux both support some level of x86-to-Arm app translation that attempts to maintain compatibility with most software, there are still plenty of things that demand an Intel or AMD processor with the x86 instruction set.

    Last week, Parallels released a new update that partially resolves this problem: Users of Parallels Desktop Pro 20.2.0 now have access to x86 operating systems via an "early technology preview" of Parallels' "proprietary emulation engine."

    The technology preview is currently limited to certain 64-bit versions of Windows 10, Windows 11, and Windows Server 2019 and 2022. Parallels also says it has tested several UEFI-compatible Linux distributions, including Ubuntu 22.04.5, Kubuntu 24.04.1, Lubuntu 24.04.1, and Debian versions 12.4 to 12.8. Fedora will install, but it's unstable. 32-bit versions of operating systems, as well as older versions of Windows like Windows 7 or 8, aren't supported.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      Parallels Desktop gains “really slow” support for x86 OSes on Apple Silicon

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 14 January 2025

    Virtualization software like Parallels and VMware Fusion give Mac owners the ability to run Windows and Linux on top of macOS, but for Apple Silicon Macs, that support was limited to the Arm-based versions of those operating systems. And while Windows and Linux both support some level of x86-to-Arm app translation that attempts to maintain compatibility with most software, there are still plenty of things that demand an Intel or AMD processor with the x86 instruction set.

    Last week, Parallels released a new update that partially resolves this problem: Users of Parallels Desktop Pro 20.2.0 now have access to x86 operating systems via an "early technology preview" of Parallels' "proprietary emulation engine."

    The technology preview is currently limited to certain 64-bit versions of Windows 10, Windows 11, and Windows Server 2019 and 2022. Parallels also says it has tested several UEFI-compatible Linux distributions, including Ubuntu 22.04.5, Kubuntu 24.04.1, Lubuntu 24.04.1, and Debian versions 12.4 to 12.8. Fedora will install, but it's unstable. 32-bit versions of operating systems, as well as older versions of Windows like Windows 7 or 8, aren't supported.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      Parallels Desktop gains “really slow” support for x86 OSes on Apple Silicon

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 14 January 2025

    Virtualization software like Parallels and VMware Fusion give Mac owners the ability to run Windows and Linux on top of macOS, but for Apple Silicon Macs, that support was limited to the Arm-based versions of those operating systems. And while Windows and Linux both support some level of x86-to-Arm app translation that attempts to maintain compatibility with most software, there are still plenty of things that demand an Intel or AMD processor with the x86 instruction set.

    Last week, Parallels released a new update that partially resolves this problem: Users of Parallels Desktop Pro 20.2.0 now have access to x86 operating systems via an "early technology preview" of Parallels' "proprietary emulation engine."

    The technology preview is currently limited to certain 64-bit versions of Windows 10, Windows 11, and Windows Server 2019 and 2022. Parallels also says it has tested several UEFI-compatible Linux distributions, including Ubuntu 22.04.5, Kubuntu 24.04.1, Lubuntu 24.04.1, and Debian versions 12.4 to 12.8. Fedora will install, but it's unstable. 32-bit versions of operating systems, as well as older versions of Windows like Windows 7 or 8, aren't supported.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      Parallels Desktop gains “really slow” support for x86 OSes on Apple Silicon

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 14 January 2025

    Virtualization software like Parallels and VMware Fusion give Mac owners the ability to run Windows and Linux on top of macOS, but for Apple Silicon Macs, that support was limited to the Arm-based versions of those operating systems. And while Windows and Linux both support some level of x86-to-Arm app translation that attempts to maintain compatibility with most software, there are still plenty of things that demand an Intel or AMD processor with the x86 instruction set.

    Last week, Parallels released a new update that partially resolves this problem: Users of Parallels Desktop Pro 20.2.0 now have access to x86 operating systems via an "early technology preview" of Parallels' "proprietary emulation engine."

    The technology preview is currently limited to certain 64-bit versions of Windows 10, Windows 11, and Windows Server 2019 and 2022. Parallels also says it has tested several UEFI-compatible Linux distributions, including Ubuntu 22.04.5, Kubuntu 24.04.1, Lubuntu 24.04.1, and Debian versions 12.4 to 12.8. Fedora will install, but it's unstable. 32-bit versions of operating systems, as well as older versions of Windows like Windows 7 or 8, aren't supported.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      Parallels Desktop gains “really slow” support for x86 OSes on Apple Silicon

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 14 January 2025

    Virtualization software like Parallels and VMware Fusion give Mac owners the ability to run Windows and Linux on top of macOS, but for Apple Silicon Macs, that support was limited to the Arm-based versions of those operating systems. And while Windows and Linux both support some level of x86-to-Arm app translation that attempts to maintain compatibility with most software, there are still plenty of things that demand an Intel or AMD processor with the x86 instruction set.

    Last week, Parallels released a new update that partially resolves this problem: Users of Parallels Desktop Pro 20.2.0 now have access to x86 operating systems via an "early technology preview" of Parallels' "proprietary emulation engine."

    The technology preview is currently limited to certain 64-bit versions of Windows 10, Windows 11, and Windows Server 2019 and 2022. Parallels also says it has tested several UEFI-compatible Linux distributions, including Ubuntu 22.04.5, Kubuntu 24.04.1, Lubuntu 24.04.1, and Debian versions 12.4 to 12.8. Fedora will install, but it's unstable. 32-bit versions of operating systems, as well as older versions of Windows like Windows 7 or 8, aren't supported.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      Parallels Desktop gains “really slow” support for x86 OSes on Apple Silicon

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 14 January 2025

    Virtualization software like Parallels and VMware Fusion give Mac owners the ability to run Windows and Linux on top of macOS, but for Apple Silicon Macs, that support was limited to the Arm-based versions of those operating systems. And while Windows and Linux both support some level of x86-to-Arm app translation that attempts to maintain compatibility with most software, there are still plenty of things that demand an Intel or AMD processor with the x86 instruction set.

    Last week, Parallels released a new update that partially resolves this problem: Users of Parallels Desktop Pro 20.2.0 now have access to x86 operating systems via an "early technology preview" of Parallels' "proprietary emulation engine."

    The technology preview is currently limited to certain 64-bit versions of Windows 10, Windows 11, and Windows Server 2019 and 2022. Parallels also says it has tested several UEFI-compatible Linux distributions, including Ubuntu 22.04.5, Kubuntu 24.04.1, Lubuntu 24.04.1, and Debian versions 12.4 to 12.8. Fedora will install, but it's unstable. 32-bit versions of operating systems, as well as older versions of Windows like Windows 7 or 8, aren't supported.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      Parallels Desktop gains “really slow” support for x86 OSes on Apple Silicon

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 14 January 2025

    Virtualization software like Parallels and VMware Fusion give Mac owners the ability to run Windows and Linux on top of macOS, but for Apple Silicon Macs, that support was limited to the Arm-based versions of those operating systems. And while Windows and Linux both support some level of x86-to-Arm app translation that attempts to maintain compatibility with most software, there are still plenty of things that demand an Intel or AMD processor with the x86 instruction set.

    Last week, Parallels released a new update that partially resolves this problem: Users of Parallels Desktop Pro 20.2.0 now have access to x86 operating systems via an "early technology preview" of Parallels' "proprietary emulation engine."

    The technology preview is currently limited to certain 64-bit versions of Windows 10, Windows 11, and Windows Server 2019 and 2022. Parallels also says it has tested several UEFI-compatible Linux distributions, including Ubuntu 22.04.5, Kubuntu 24.04.1, Lubuntu 24.04.1, and Debian versions 12.4 to 12.8. Fedora will install, but it's unstable. 32-bit versions of operating systems, as well as older versions of Windows like Windows 7 or 8, aren't supported.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      Parallels Desktop gains “really slow” support for x86 OSes on Apple Silicon

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 14 January 2025

    Virtualization software like Parallels and VMware Fusion give Mac owners the ability to run Windows and Linux on top of macOS, but for Apple Silicon Macs, that support was limited to the Arm-based versions of those operating systems. And while Windows and Linux both support some level of x86-to-Arm app translation that attempts to maintain compatibility with most software, there are still plenty of things that demand an Intel or AMD processor with the x86 instruction set.

    Last week, Parallels released a new update that partially resolves this problem: Users of Parallels Desktop Pro 20.2.0 now have access to x86 operating systems via an "early technology preview" of Parallels' "proprietary emulation engine."

    The technology preview is currently limited to certain 64-bit versions of Windows 10, Windows 11, and Windows Server 2019 and 2022. Parallels also says it has tested several UEFI-compatible Linux distributions, including Ubuntu 22.04.5, Kubuntu 24.04.1, Lubuntu 24.04.1, and Debian versions 12.4 to 12.8. Fedora will install, but it's unstable. 32-bit versions of operating systems, as well as older versions of Windows like Windows 7 or 8, aren't supported.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      Parallels Desktop gains “really slow” support for x86 OSes on Apple Silicon

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 14 January 2025

    Virtualization software like Parallels and VMware Fusion give Mac owners the ability to run Windows and Linux on top of macOS, but for Apple Silicon Macs, that support was limited to the Arm-based versions of those operating systems. And while Windows and Linux both support some level of x86-to-Arm app translation that attempts to maintain compatibility with most software, there are still plenty of things that demand an Intel or AMD processor with the x86 instruction set.

    Last week, Parallels released a new update that partially resolves this problem: Users of Parallels Desktop Pro 20.2.0 now have access to x86 operating systems via an "early technology preview" of Parallels' "proprietary emulation engine."

    The technology preview is currently limited to certain 64-bit versions of Windows 10, Windows 11, and Windows Server 2019 and 2022. Parallels also says it has tested several UEFI-compatible Linux distributions, including Ubuntu 22.04.5, Kubuntu 24.04.1, Lubuntu 24.04.1, and Debian versions 12.4 to 12.8. Fedora will install, but it's unstable. 32-bit versions of operating systems, as well as older versions of Windows like Windows 7 or 8, aren't supported.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86 tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagapple silicon tagarm tagarm tagarm taglinux taglinux taglinux tagparallels tagparallels tagparallels tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagx86 tagx86 tagx86

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
  • history

    Get older posts