Shame, I spent a week getting this Parallels VM just right, all loaded with developer tools. Unless someone has a fix for imported HDDs, I'm going to say to hell with it and start from a VM Fusion fresh VM. On VM Fusion, although it's pokey, it at least shows a coherent UI. On Parallels, you get fireworks and flashing lights. Use darwin.iso 10.3.10 works per internal OS wikis 11.0-RN: VMware Tools is notarized for MacOS 10.14. VM Fusion runs Electron apps reasonable well. The following table details the compatibility of VMware Tools for FreeBSD (freebsd.iso) with guest operating systems. Why am I bothering? Because Parallels has a hard time running Electron based apps and I'm a heavy Visual Studio Code user. VMware tools can be downloaded from this official website: https://c. For details on linux.iso, refer to VMware Tools 10.3.25 Release Notes. For details on darwin.iso version, refer to VMware Tools 12.1.0 Release Notes. VM Fusion did a terrible job importing this VM. This video will show you how to install VMware tools on Mac OS VM in VMware Workstation. Customers should use or upgrade to VMware Tools 11.0.6 until they can update their Windows OS to meet the prerequisites for VMware Tools 12.2.5. And frankly, the screen looked like s***. Also, the imported VM was INCREDIBLY slow running on Fusion. Second Case: When I imported a Catalina HDD from Parallels, even after installing the tools, I only got 1024x768. This is an old darwin. (yeah, I made the memory and processor tweaks, I'm an experienced VM user). First case: When I installed a Catalina VM using VM Fusion 11.5.1, after I installed the Darwin.iso tools, I was able to get 1680x1050 (and a second choice, 840xsomething, but no other choices) on a new 16" MacBook Pro 2019, and the VM machine was reasonably fast, although nowhere near as fast as a Parallels VM.
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