Thanks all,
I have maxed out my mac, I have 512 gb storage, 8 gb ram and the I7 processor, 
so I can quite easily run windows 7. 
To clarify, It’s recommended to allocate 10 gb for windows and jaws, plus 
another 10 for other things? I’ll only be using a couple of games, dvd audio 
extractor, unless there is a version of that for the mac, and sendero gps and 
maps for the pc. 
20 gb should cover that nicely. 
and I guess 1 gb of ram since the games are only audio ones. 
Hope everyone has a good day,
Andrew 
On 1 Jan 2014, at 5:51 pm, Chris Blouch <cblo...@aol.com> wrote:

> To add a bit more, VMWare is an app like any other. When it is running a 
> virtual machine it uses up CPU and RAM but once you quit it it takes up only 
> disk space. The disk space, as previously mentioned, is allocated as you use 
> it. So I usually give 60GB to my virtual machine knowing that I'll only use a 
> few of those GB for the initial Windows install plus whatever else I put in. 
> How many actual GB Windows takes depends on what version. Win7 with the 
> basics like Jaws and Firefox can easily eat up 10GB. For most folks disk 
> space is a lot more available than RAM or CPU. I don't know as much about RAM 
> but CPU is like most apps. If you just have VMWare with Windows sitting there 
> doing nothing you'll use very little of your Mac's CPU. I usually try to 
> allocate at least two CPU on Windows newer than XP. I generally give 512MB 
> RAM to XP, 1024MB to anything newer and 2048MB to any 64-bit Windows. Of 
> course you can't do that if it will starve your Mac side. If your machine 
> only has two CPUs and 2GB RAM, don't allocate it all to Windows or things 
> will bottleneck quickly.
> 
> CB
> 
> On 12/30/13 6:29 AM, Piotr Machacz wrote:
>> The requirements for disk space and ram depend non the windows version. XP 
>> doesn’t need much, you could probably do with even 256MB and a couple gigs 
>> of disk space, but I’d recommend at least 512 or a gig of ram. Newer windows 
>> need more, for vista and seven you need a gig of ram and 20 gigs of disk 
>> space just for the OS.
>> As far as resource usage, of course it has to come from somewhere, so they 
>> won’t be available on the mac. The good thing though is that the settings 
>> you choose for the VM aren’t immediately allocated. So, if your VM has 2 
>> gigs of ram, but the VM is only using half of it, then vmware won’t use 
>> those 2 gigs as long as it’s not needed. The same holds for the CPU, where 
>> you can also specify how many cores a VM can use. But again it won’t 
>> immediately use all of it. For disk space, you can choose if you want it to 
>> already allocate the space (EG, a 20 gig virtual disk would already be 20 
>> gigs), or not (so then that file wouldn’t take up the space if it’s not 
>> being used).
>> 
>> For games, you can play audio games and anything light. But if you want to 
>> play main stream games that use a lot of video card resources, you’ll be 
>> better off setting up a bootcamp partition, so the game can use all the 
>> resources of your mac.
>> On 30 Dec 2013, at 10:24 am, Andrew Head <ath...@bigpond.net.au> wrote:
>> 
>>> Hi all,
>>> Just got a question about windows on the mac in virtual machine. Can 
>>> someone please explain how this works exactly? I know you can assign a 
>>> certain disc space, ram, etc to use windows. How does this work? what is 
>>> the least amount of hard drive space needed to run windows and what’s the 
>>> least amount of ram needed? Because this hard drive space and ram is being 
>>> used for windows, does this effect things on the mac side, do you now have 
>>> less hard drive space and ram on the mac side of things because part of the 
>>> computer is now being used for windows?
>>> And what if you were using windows for something requiring a lot of 
>>> processing power, such as game play? if you chose the least amount of ram 
>>> and hard drive space, does this then effect how well programs will run 
>>> under windows and how much storage space you have under windows?
>>> I hope this email makes sense, and thanks in advance for answering my 
>>> questions.
>>> Hope everyone has a good day and a safe, blessed and happy new year.
>>> Andrew
>>> Sent from my 11 inch macbook air
>>> 
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