![]() ![]() Apparently there’s an app that checks and verifies whether Windows 11 will run on a user’s hardware and the requirements are difficult to meet. I’ve been reading reports about Windows users finding out that Windows 11 is really, REALLY picky about hardware requirements. The only question is one of licensing whether Microsoft will require that Windows 11 ARM version is licensed for installation inside a virtual machine. Windows 10 has had an ARM version for a while now, and the Window 11 Insider Preview is available as an ARM version. ![]() Running Unix/Linux under virtualization on an M-series Mac might not have enough customers to keep Parallels in business long term. Parallels is trying but can’t make Microsoft do anything. Apple moving away from Intel so VMWare seems to not care about non-Intel related virtualization. Parallels can’t do anything with Windows 11 until Microsoft releases an ARM version. Just say, "Hey, Siri," to your HomePod mini and ask for these podcasts, and our latest HomeKit Insider episode too.If you want an ad-free main AppleInsider Podcast experience, you can support the AppleInsider podcast by subscribing for $5 per month through Apple's Podcasts app, or via Patreon if you prefer any other podcast player. Keep up with everything Apple in the weekly AppleInsider Podcast - and get a fast news update from AppleInsider Daily. That will change once Apple transitions its laptop and desktop lines to Apple Silicon, leaving third-party virtualization solutions as the only option in the near term. The suite is optimized for macOS Big Sur, though Parallels is already developing tweaks for the upcoming macOS Monterey.įor now, users can turn to Apple's Boot Camp to run both native and virtualized instances of Windows on Intel Macs. Parallels most recently updated its Parallels Desktop virtualization software in April with support for Apple's M1 chip. Windows 11 debuted last week with a fresh user interface, new multitasking options, Android app support, Microsoft Teams integration, and more. "Since Windows 11 has just been announced recently, the Parallels Engineering team is waiting for the official Windows 11 Insider Preview build to start studying changes introduced in the new OS to deliver full compatibility in future Parallels Desktop updates," said Nick Dobrovolskiy, Parallels' SVP of engineering and support. Parallels failed to provide an estimated launch timeframe in a statement to iMore, saying only that it "will surely do everything that's possible to make it happen." ![]()
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