I'd like to know what VM's are able to run OS X, and how well.

First, being able to run 10.6 as a guest -- it's my understanding that this was 
technically possible, but restricted by the license, and the main VM's check 
for and refuse to run this. (Sniff ... PPC programs ... photoshop elements, 
quickbooks, appleworks (well, that last one is no longer needed :-).)

Second, 10.7 -- I've got what should be a perfectly valid installer image, and 
I'd love to be able to use the 10.7 finder instead of anything I've seen that 
came later. If there's a way to have the 10.7 guest signal the host to open 
files, that would be wonderful. If not, just running a 10.7 internals is better 
than nothing. 10.7's sandbox was not very tight, and I keep running into 
trouble with the 10.9 (main issue stems from trying to keep user files on a 
different partition than the operating system partition. This means that I have 
symlinks from inside my home directory on the OS partition to an external 
partition where I have my files. 10.9 thinks that's suspicious. At the moment, 
this is mostly tamed, and only causes me problems at login when various 
files/windows will not restore and throw a sandboxing error in the logs.) Yes, 
this means running most of my stuff in the 10.7 VM, and only using the 10.9 or 
10.10 host for a few things that need the improved video support.

If 10.7 isn't a workable guest, then 10.9 as a last resort. I have one program 
that I use that does not work on 10.10 -- or rather, the "upgrade" is a paid 
version change rather than a free update. 

Bonus points for "Fast" video access from guest apps.

===

Separately, what VM's are good for running Microsoft windows -- either XP or 7? 
The goal is one single program -- Dragon Naturally Speaking, and those are the 
windows versions I have licenses for.
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