
Some are cloud-based, like Microsoft’s coming Cloud PC offering. We’ll get to that.Īnd with the shift away from Windows as the center of personal computing, we’re starting to see more solutions for running Windows applications on new platforms, many of which are mobile. In the near future, it’s Windows (and presumably Linux) on Apple Silicon (M1). Back in the day, that meant emulating Intel-based (x86) Windows on PowerPC-based Macs.

I used Connectix Virtual PC, which was later purchased by Microsoft, back in the early days of OS X almost 20 years ago before moving on to more modern solutions like VMWare Fusion and then Parallels Desktop.Īnd anytime there’s a processor architecture change, these things get even more interesting. Virtualization has long been important on the Mac, primarily because of the app gap, a situation that is a lot less problematic today.

Aside from the usual product updates, the big news this year was that Parallels had been featured in Apple’s M1 chipset reveal, and I was quite curious to know what that would look like.īut there’s a rich history to consider here. I met (wait for it, virtually) with Parallels ahead of the launch of Parallels Desktop 16 this past fall, and before Apple shipped macOS Big Sur.
