P arallels has added support for x86 emulation in Parallels Desktop 20.2, product manager Mikhail Ushakov wrote in a blog post last week. The “early technology preview” will l ...
Last week, Parallels released a new update that partially resolves this problem: Users of Parallels Desktop Pro 20.2.0 now ...
Parallels Desktop introduces a new experimental feature that lets you install x86_64 operating systems on your Apple-silicon ...
Parallels Desktop 20.2 is out now, with the latest edition including 64-bit x86 emulation for Apple Silicon and more ...
For a large number of Mac users who are still on Intel-based Macs, there’s one very good reason why they’re not switching ...
After the previous Parallels Desktop version brought Writing Tools support for Windows virtual machines, the new update improves it.
Certain operating systems from the x86 world now run under Parallels Desktop on Apple Silicon. There are a few things to bear in mind.
Apple Silicon refers to chipsets developed by Apple for its products. The A-series processors are used in iPhones and low-end iPads. M-series processors are used in the Mac, iPad, and Apple Vision ...
The Parallels Desktop 20.2.0 update makes it possible to run full-fledged Windows on Apple Mac computers with their own ...
If you wanted to run Windows 11 on Apple hardware, there are mainly two ways do so, either running it via Parallels ... on Apple M1 and other Apple Silicon hardware according to a developer ...
Fortunately, Parallels has worked closely with Microsoft ... so it relies on Apple’s Rosetta to run on Macs with Apple Silicon, but we found that performance was pretty good regardless.
That changed last week with Parallels Desktop 20.2, which adds preliminary x86 emulation so you can fire up 64-bit versions ...