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Published a today with some tips for how to do really easy web application development using VMware Fusion on your Mac. Brian is a web developer, and he does a lot of development using PHP, which ultimately runs in a LAMP stack.

In his case, a lot of his work runs in the. Brian uses as a way to have a virtual machine instance of Fedora (which is what Amazon runs in its EC2 cloud) on his Mac, in which VM he has created a shared folder that points out onto his Mac, where his PHP and HTML code resides.

Brian likes to code using the text editor, on his Mac, and so when he saves off what he’s doing in Smultron somewhere in his Mac Documents folder, he can immediately pop over to his Fedora VM on Fusion, and test run that code over the shared folder. That is to say, Apache, running in that Fedora VM, can execute that PHP code, via the shared folder, which looks out onto Brian’s Mac. You can watch Brian’s video below, and below that, there’s one of our that talks about shared folders. And here’s that video tutorial on using: This entry was posted in on. I was checking out my Google Alerts the other day, and came across with. I’ve seen posts like this before, of course, but what really made me happy this time around was that it was an official talking about it! How’s that for validation?

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In the post, Shaan Hurley talks about the niceties of running AutoCAD on a Mac, and the various way to do it, including both Boot Camp and virtualization, fairly mentioning both us and our primary competition in the field. But what really made me smile was this part: We showed running on a Mac using last week at in the General Design booth. Yup, that’s right.

When the rubber really hits the road, at a tradeshow, where you want to put your best foot forward, and make sure everything “just works,” the AutoCAD team selected VMware Fusion 2. Check out the great picture of them at the booth. We on the Fusion team haven’t done any specific demo videos showing off AutoCAD, but I did some quick YouTube research, and lo and behold, there are handful of helpful videos out there showing off VMware Fusion 2 (you know, the one with the enhanced 3D acceleration features? Yeah, that one.

) running AutoCAD. Here are the videos I found (with Spanish captions, no less!): The first one shows off how to disable the “Optimize Mouse for Gaming” feature to get the best performance.

Yesterday Apple released Mac OS X 10.5.6 update. For folks who are running Mac OS X Server 10.5.x in a virtual machine, you may see Software Update (in the virtual machine) offering to update your system. We recommend that you do not proceed with this update, or at least take a snapshot of your OS X guest first. There are some known issues with this OS update that cause WindowManager to fail under default setting in a OS X virtual machine, as well as some USB issues.

Go to the for more details on these issues and workaround in case you already updated your virtual machine to 10.5.6. These issues will be fixed in the next maintenance release of VMware Fusion. And they do not affect Mac OS X 10.5.6 as a host.

This entry was posted in on. I gave a brief overview of what VMware Tools is and why they’re is important. But how do you interact with them? The main way is via VMware Toolbox.

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For

For Mac Eyes Only (@formaceyesonly Twitter)

You’ll need Tools installed, of course, and the way you get to it depends on the guest OS you’re running. In Windows, right-click the VMware-three-boxes logo in the system tray and select Open VMware Tools. In Linux or Solaris, run vmware-toolbox. We don’t currently have a Toolbox for OS X guests, and I’m not sure about FreeBSD or Netware. You’ll need to have opened Toolbox as an administrator for some features. Once in Toolbox, you can get information about what version of Tools you have installed (About tab), shrink a disk (Shrink tab, requires a sparse disk with no snapshots), links to shared folders (Shared Folders tab, if you have them enabled), scripts which are run when the virtual machine powers on/off or suspends (Scripts tab), connect/disconnect devices (Devices tab), and general options (Options tab).