![]() ![]() It would be nice to play in OpenBSD in a VM until I get myself another machine. This would be fun to try-and I may-but I want to keep my Mac OS environment around. There seems to be evidence that OpenBSD boots natively on these machines though. Now that CentOS is not a thing, basically Ubuntu/Debian, and Oracle are about the only options for production. Specify the name and location of your virtual machine or leave the default settings, then click Continue. Choose Fedora Linux from the list of the operating system sources found on your Mac, then click Continue. Choose 'Install Windows or another OS from a DVD or and image file', then click Continue. Any entry simply loops back to the prompt. Start Parallels Desktop, then click File -> New. Create new Parallels guest using above ISO file as disk. I’ve seen little mention of OpenBSD and M1 Macs in the same breath. Download OracleLinux-R8-U6-aarch64-dvd.iso file from Oracle. I’m guessing it simply isn’t supported yet, but I want to rule out the possibilities where I just need to add a missing file under the EFI folder of the image, or I’m just really messing up how to get Parallels to boot from external USB. Has anyone else been able to accomplish this? For reference, I have the same issue with NetBSD’s aarch64 image. The install image is written to USB, and Parallels seems to recognize it as attached, but not bootable. The effort was minimal, involving nothing more than spinning up the ISO in Parallels. 1 Hello there, I read in a previous note that there is an issue to install Oracle Linux 9 ARM64 in Parallels for Mac M1, so I tried to install now OL8 ARM64, but when I attach the iso image, it just stays in the install menu, and I cannot from there to proceed with the installation. But today's announcement is another signal that virtualization and cloud computing are the way forward for people who need to run Windows apps on their Mac if you're still hoping for an Apple Silicon version of Boot Camp, it's time to start moving on.I’ve managed to get a FreeBSD VM and a few Linux VMs running in Parallels on the M1 MacBook. Under Windows 10 and earlier versions, Linux under Windwos required disabling the Windows (not Mac) hypervisor with. ![]() We've asked Microsoft if it has anything new to share about running Windows directly on Apple Silicon Mac hardware and the company says it has "nothing further to share" on that front. That wouldn't be the case for Apple Silicon Macs, and there's really no good reason why Apple would spend the time and resources to develop and maintain alternate graphics, networking, and chipset drivers just so a handful of users could run a competitor's operating system. But because Intel Macs were mostly just PCs under the hood, the company could rely on Intel, AMD, Nvidia, Broadcom, and other companies to actually provide drivers for most of the important components. To run a fully functional copy of Windows on Apple Silicon Macs, someone would need to re-create this driver work for Windows, too.Īpple provided some Windows drivers for Intel Macs for components like its mice and trackpads. The standard version for home users and students now costs 99.99/£89.99 per year, while the Pro Edition costs 119.99/£99.99, and the Business edition is 149.99/£119.99. They have explicitly developed the ability to securely run third-party OSes and bootloaders on these machines, and left the rest to us." "We do not have any expectations of direct support, documentation, or additional development effort from them, nor do we expect them to attempt to hinder third-party OSes in any deliberate way. "Apple's approach to third-party OSes is essentially 'have fun,'" explains the Asahi Linux Introduction to Apple Silicon. Further Reading Four-person dev team gets Apple’s M-series GPU working in Linux ![]()
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