Originally posted by: ViRGE
Just make sure you get a CPU with Intel's VT technology. Parallels requires it, and VMWare's performance benefits immensely from it.
Originally posted by: slugg
Originally posted by: ViRGE
Just make sure you get a CPU with Intel's VT technology. Parallels requires it, and VMWare's performance benefits immensely from it.
No kidding. I have an e2180 (doesn't have VT technology) and it's abysmally slow.
One thing to note, however, is that VMWare won't run your Windows partition as a VM like it would a Bootcamp partition. Well, at least I haven't been able to for some reason.
Actually, it will. This is one of the things I prefer about VMWare vs. Parallels, where bootcamp doesn't work. (On a Hackintosh that is).Originally posted by: slugg
One thing to note, however, is that VMWare won't run your Windows partition as a VM like it would a Bootcamp partition. Well, at least I haven't been able to for some reason.
Originally posted by: Kaido
Originally posted by: slugg
Originally posted by: ViRGE
Just make sure you get a CPU with Intel's VT technology. Parallels requires it, and VMWare's performance benefits immensely from it.
No kidding. I have an e2180 (doesn't have VT technology) and it's abysmally slow.
One thing to note, however, is that VMWare won't run your Windows partition as a VM like it would a Bootcamp partition. Well, at least I haven't been able to for some reason.
Well, that and the e2180 is a dual-core - so Mac is only getting 1 CPU and Windows is only getting 1 CPU. Quad-Cores are *amazing* with VMware 😀
Originally posted by: slugg
Originally posted by: Kaido
Originally posted by: slugg
Originally posted by: ViRGE
Just make sure you get a CPU with Intel's VT technology. Parallels requires it, and VMWare's performance benefits immensely from it.
No kidding. I have an e2180 (doesn't have VT technology) and it's abysmally slow.
One thing to note, however, is that VMWare won't run your Windows partition as a VM like it would a Bootcamp partition. Well, at least I haven't been able to for some reason.
Well, that and the e2180 is a dual-core - so Mac is only getting 1 CPU and Windows is only getting 1 CPU. Quad-Cores are *amazing* with VMware 😀
^^ It has been compared to an E5400. The E5400 smokes it, even when the e2180 was at 3.0 ghz. The E5400 is 2.7 I believe.
Originally posted by: Kaido
Originally posted by: slugg
Originally posted by: Kaido
Originally posted by: slugg
Originally posted by: ViRGE
Just make sure you get a CPU with Intel's VT technology. Parallels requires it, and VMWare's performance benefits immensely from it.
No kidding. I have an e2180 (doesn't have VT technology) and it's abysmally slow.
One thing to note, however, is that VMWare won't run your Windows partition as a VM like it would a Bootcamp partition. Well, at least I haven't been able to for some reason.
Well, that and the e2180 is a dual-core - so Mac is only getting 1 CPU and Windows is only getting 1 CPU. Quad-Cores are *amazing* with VMware 😀
^^ It has been compared to an E5400. The E5400 smokes it, even when the e2180 was at 3.0 ghz. The E5400 is 2.7 I believe.
Not saying it's a bad chip - I have one! - just saying for virtualization, nice to have more cores available. It's real nice running an XP VM with 2 cores and 3 gigs of RAM 😀