But since QB is critical to me, and I don’t want to shell out another $200+ to Intuit for the privilege of continuing to run 2-yr-old software, I haven’t upgraded. Most other applications of importance will. I have been wanting to upgrade to Sierra from El Capitan but Intuit says my Quickbooks Pro 2014 for Mac won’t run on Sierra. This is fascinating, especially for someone who has never messed around with VM before. Happy virtualizing! Let us know in the comments if you have any particularly useful tips, tricks, or recommendations about running Mac OS in a VM. A big thanks to our friend Keir at MacKungFu for discovering the Parallels Desktop Lite app has this functionality. While we have covered many virtualization and virtual machine tips and tricks before, this Parallels Lite approach offers a simple way to run Mac OS or Mac OS X within a virtual machine, and it’s free. ** You can also choose to restore from a time machine backup in the MacOS setup screen if you want to replicate an existing Mac installation for testing purposes. Another option for Windows and Linux is to use VirtualBox, which is free for every purpose. * Parallels Desktop Lite is free to download and use for the purposes described here, additional features and operating system support can be unlocked through in-app purchases but that is not necessary for running a Mac OS virtual machine. You boot and shut down the Mac virtual machine by launching and quitting the Parallels Desktop Lite app, which will manage the virtual machine and offer power options directly. In the walkthrough here we installed macOS Sierra into a virtual machine atop Mac OS Sierra, but you could also use it to install other versions of Mac OS including beta releases, El Capitan, Mavericks, and theoretically just about any other Mac system software release that you have available as an installer file, iso file, or other disk image. Easy! You can go full screen and use it full time if you want, or keep it in window mode. That’s all there is to it, when finished the Mac will be running another version of MacOS in within the Parallels virtual machine. Go through the normal installation process, when compete the virtual machine will boot up and you will be running a virtualized Mac OS installation atop your existing MacOS.The virtual machine will boot and load the Mac OS installer file selected earlier, now choose to “Install Mac OS” to perform a clean install** of Mac system software within the virtual machine.Optionally click on “Configure” to manually adjust CPU, memory, and disk space of the virtual machine you are setting up.At the Virtual Machine Configuration screen, choose Continue to go with the default configuration of 2 CPUs, 2GB RAM, and the default disk space.Give the virtual machine a name and a location to store the image file, then Continue again.Click Continue to create a new disk image file for the virtual machine. ![]() Parallels Lite will scan the hard drive for Mac OS installers and operating system ISO files, choose “Install macOS” and click Continue (choose “Locate Manually” and navigate to the installer if it did not find it automatically).Choose “Install Windows or another OS from a DVD or image file” from the available options and click Continue.Launch Parallels Desktop Lite and choose “Linux Only”, the Free option then click Continue. ![]()
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