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(just checked - Parallels doesn't support OS9) A short list of supported guest OS If they can do this with reasonable performance then they will have a lot of interest from their existing customer base. ![]() Its unclear if their native M1 version will include an emulator to run VMs for Intel OSs, and what performance it would have. the ethernet NIC (Parallels allows the user to choose the identity and address of the NIC) ![]() Normally their SW uses the CPU's built in ability to run virtual machines, I think they emulate some of the services that must be shared, e.g. POWERPC EMULATOR MAC OS HIGH SIERRA FOR MACParallels says: "A new version of Parallels Desktop for Mac that can run on Mac with Apple M1 chip is already in active development." Link It won't work on an M1-based Mac – such as the one that MiguelD is purchasing. This means that the nanokernel is able to intercept PowerPC interrupts, translate them to 68k interrupts (then doing a mixed mode switch, if necessary), and then execute 68k code to handle the interrupts. Unfortunately, not an option (at least, not currently) for ARM-based ones. This emulator takes advantage of features built into the PowerPC processors, and accesses the very lowest levels of the OS, running at the same level as and tightly connected to the Mac OS nanokernel. POWERPC EMULATOR MAC OS HIGH SIERRA 32 BITI guess I will be installing MacOS 10.13 or 10.14 as a VM so that I can run 32 bit applications. Theoretically, you could run some old 68K-based applications, in which case, you'd have:Īn ARM-based Mac, running a Rosetta 2 translation ofĪn Intel-based PowerPC emulation application, runningĪ pre-Mac-OS-X, PowerPC-based operating system, using a built-in 68K emulator to run This could make for an interesting emulation environment. The question for a M1-based Mac user would be whether the PowerPC emulator in question would run directly under Big Sur. If you're running it inside of a Intel-based VM now, you must be running it inside of a PowerPC emulator, and an Intel-based version of Mac OS X. I have also Installed OSX 9 as a virtual machine so that I can run 16 bit applications.
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