VMware Fusion Beta 3 vs Parallels
10 April 2007, 11:19 AM Filed in:
Mac OS X
 |
.on Software
Parallels Desktop for Mac
 was the first kid on the block to support virtualisation of other PC operating 
systems
on Mac OS X. However, in the past fortnight, I've found out that:
1. Parallels allocates just a
tad  too many unnecessary Quartz windows
1
, which causes the Mac OS X WindowServer to start going bonkers on larger 
monitors.
I've personally seen the right half of a TextEdit window disappear, and Safari 
not
being able to create a new window while Parallels is running, even with no VM 
running.
(I've started a
discussion
 about this on the Parallels forums.)
2. Parallels does evil
 things with your Windows XP Boot Camp partition, such as replace your
ntoskrnl.exe and hal.dll
 file and rewriting the crucial
boot.ini
 file. This causes some rather hard-to-diagnose problems with some low-level 
software,
such as
MacDrive
, a fine product that's pretty much essential for my Boot Camp use. Personally, 
I'd
rather not use a virtualisation program that decides to screw around with my 
operating
system kernel, hardware abstraction layer, and boot settings,
thank you very much
.
VMware Fusion does none of these dumbass things, and provides the same, simple 
drag'n'drop
support and shared folders to share files between Windows XP and Mac OS X. I 
concur
with
stuffonfire about VMware Fusion Beta 3
: even in beta, it's a lot better than Parallels so far. Far better host 
operating
system performance, better network support, hard disk snapshots (albeit not with
Boot Camp), and DirectX 8.1 support to boot. (A good
friend o' mine
 reckons that 3D Studio runs faster
 in VMware Fusion on his Core 2 Duo MacBook Pro than it does natively on his 
dedicated
Athlon 64 Windows machine. Nice.) The only major feature missing from VMware 
Fusion
is
Coherence
, and I can live without that. It's very cool, but hardly necessary.
Oh yeah, and since VMWare Fusion in beta right now, it's free as well.
Go get it
.
1
 Strictly speaking, allocating a ton of Quartz windows is Qt's fault, not 
Parallels's
fault. Google Earth has the same problem. However, I don't really care if it's 
Qt's
fault, considering that it simply means running Parallels at all (even with no 
VM
open) renders my machine unstable.

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