Shared Folder. Control Panel Overview. Boot Camp Control Panel: Keyboard. VMware Fusion Installation Assistant. Select Operating System. Choose Windows Firmware. Installation Summary. Windows Integration Options. Enable Shared Folders. Maybe you've assigned too many kernels to Windows? Even cut and paste between operating systems. So, it's very much like having two computers running through the same speakers. Exactly the same subjective performance, in fact.
Since Jaws with Eloquence or Vocalizer 2 is so incredibly fluid until it crashes , I always get immediately frustrated with Fusion for this reason and stick to Bootcamp.
Sound editing is also too slow, and so is editing Word documents if there are comments in the doc. I also can't do without capslock as a VO key. See keyboard hack above. Note that, when setting processor cores, Fusion is reporting virtual cores, meaning threads.
So, for a dual-core I7 or newer I5, you have 4 processor cores and can give the VM 2 cores. THat seems optimal in my experience, but it still lags. It's just about the best Windows machine I've ever had, despite having to blow away the bootcamp partition a time or two when I messed something up. Generally speaking, it's been very stable and Macs have far better speakers than most Windows laptops. I hate the touchbar under any circumstances, so getting a non-touchbar model is the answer until Apple takes that option away like they've been doing with the startup chime, USB ports, headphone jack, home button, etc.
Only workarounds for escape and function keys would be an external keyboard or else some fancy Auto Hotkey scripts to replace them with macros. My MBA really just doesn't get quite loud enough to work outdoors, for instance, though it's fine at the desk.
I'm planning on posting this question as its own topic at some point today, when I find the time, but I thought I would go ahead and ask it here since I saw this post on the home page.
I'm running the latest version of Windows 10 on a mac book pro through bootcamp. For example, if I read a line that says, "Peter went to the store" my screen readers under bootcamp will sometimes cut off the word peter and just say,, "went to the store.
I would say I experience this issue at least two thirds of the time when I'm using the headphone port for sound. However, I do not believe I ever experience it when I'm using the computer's internal speakers.
I have tried almost everything I can think of to fix this issue: I have deleted and reinstalled my audio drivers, used Window's 10 built in audio trouble shooter, tried multiple synthesizers and screen reader settings, and even did a complete clean install of Windows.
I'm wondering if updating the Mac OS to the latest version could help this issue on bootcamp. Has anyone experienced this chopping off the first part of a phrase issue in bootcamp, and if so do you have any suggestions for fixing it? I do think I will update to High Sierra, but I hate to lose the ability to accessibly switch between windows and mac, if updating does not fix my issue; of course, if it does fix my audio issue I would gladly deal with the extra trouble of switching between each OS; as I said, I no longer even use Mac OS, so I never really boot into that part of my drive.
I would really appreciate any help with my issue. This is the machine I use for work every day, and the issue has a serious productivity impact on my work. Furthermore, I think that VMWare is a superior virtualization software solution overall because it is much more flexible and versatile than Bootcamp. Really, it boils down to one of two options.
Option one is the ability to install Windows os to the hard drive of your Mac and boot to either Mac OSX or Windows exclusively at one time. Option two is to create a virtual machine in VMWare and run both operating systems at the same time. Directly installing Windows to the hard drive of a Mac alongside OSX seems to be the typical solution for which Mac users most frequently opt for. And it does have several advantages. Also, note that you will only be able to boot to one operating system at a time.
This may feel a bit tedious, but there is a massive advantage: efficient utilization of system resources. As such, this solution is much better for people who need to take full advantage of a Windows environment and run resource-intensive applications. In summary, the following outlines the advantages and disadvantages of installing Windows to the HDD of a Mac with Bootcamp:. Likely the most common Windows-on-a-Mac need, many Apple professionals also require Windows due to the need to run one critical proprietary, often industry-specific, Windows application.
Despite cloud-computing and web-based trends, some applications continue only providing full functionality when run within a dedicated Windows environment. I possess such first-hand experience; an industry-specific professional services automation application powers my business' daily operations. While possessing mobile and web-based options, the program only provides full functionality--such as financial and accounting features--when run natively within Windows.
Unless the sole proprietary program possesses intensive processing requirements, such as is commonly true for video editing and three-dimensional drafting, running Windows within a VMware or Parallels VM typically proves most convenient.
Tasks commonly completed using OS X continue to prove immediately available, while the single Windows application is just a few clicks away and behaves as if it's just another application needing to be opened within OS X. No reboot is required. No OS X applications or functions are sacrificed. Some Apple professionals must run multiple Windows applications simultaneously. An example is a Mac user who frequently manages workflow processes using a Windows-based industry-specific application and often enters customer-related information within a Windows-specific tool.
Such a scenario is trickier.
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