![]() ![]() >this time pressed alt key on boot up and the screenshot in my original post showed up (o n the late 2011 model. > pressed C during boot up and I could hear DVD drive running but the boot went to OSX and OSX loaded up. > Put in my usb and DVD into the laptop and restarted > Also made a bootable USB drive using dd (see link in original post) > Downloaded 1.0.8 amd64 version of iso file from Otherwise, it's the same wherever you get it from.Ok so I have tried this on both macbook pro late 2011 running osx 10.8.5 and a macbook pro mid 2009 model running mavericks. ![]() UTM is free and open-source, but the paid version in the Mac App Store provides automatic updates and helps support development. Under its skin is QEMU, a very old but still very good tool. UTM is another virtualization tool worth looking at, and it offers something the others currently do not. The icing on the cake is the Coherence mode, allowing you to run Linux apps outside the main Parallels window, almost as if they were native Apple Silicon Mac apps. Again, you'll be requiring Linux distros with ARM builds, but Parallels makes it super simple to download and install them. You're looking at $100 for a perpetual license, but it works really well and it's easy to use. Alternatively, using the Virtualization Framework are more consumer-friendly tools from the likes of Parallels, UTM, and VMWare.Īlternatively, you can go for Parallels, but this one will cost you, and it isn't cheap. But some of the biggest names are available for ARM, including Ubuntu and Debian. ![]() The caveat remains that you have to use an ARM-friendly Linux distribution (or "distro"), so that could rule out your favorite. ![]()
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