They support Windows 11 Pro and Enterprise. Parallels has an easy installer for Windows and it can be licensed through the normal Windows 11 site: No you can't unless you are enrolled in the Microsoft's Windows Insider program. "You can get Windows onto an Apple Silicon MacBook Air." The only Windows solution MS provides is an ‘Insider Preview’ version. Our test machine has 32GB of RAM and is running the (at the time of writing) latest version of macOS Monterey. What I object to is the first sentence of the article. Parallels is in a weird predicament where M1 is concerned: their software is definitely ready for primetime, but MS Windows does not support ARM processing out of the box. We tested Parallels Desktop 18 (Pro Edition) on a 16-inch 2021 MacBook Pro with an M1 Max processor, so everything you read below is relevant to the new ARM-based Apple Silicon processors. The integration between the two operating systems works extraordinarily well. I think the main takeaway is Microsoft won't go out of their way to break ARM64 installs if they aren't on computers with Qualcomm CPUs.Īgreed, the Parallels install and support for Windows 11 Insider Preview works very well. The program is optimized for macOS Monterey and supports a variety of guest. Parallels already had a simple install for Windows 11 Insider Preview ARM64 - super slick and super quick! Parallels Desktop 17 for Mac virtualization software is compatible both with Apple Silicon and Intel Core-based Macs. There's a lot less to this announcement than is implied. That's not a generally available version. The only version that I am aware of is the Windows 11 Insider Preview ARM64.
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