Gain easy access to virtual machines via an intuitive home page interface.
Broad host and guest operating system support.
Share data between the host computer and virtual machine.
Use 3rd-party pre-configured virtual machines and images.
Share data between host computer and virtual machine.
Experience the benefits of preconfigured products without any installation or configuration hassles.
Run multiple operating systems simultaneously on a single computer.
VMware Player can also be used to run a virtual copy of an old PC so that you can recycle the old machines you have under your desk or stored in the closet. With its user-friendly interface, VMware Player makes it effortless for anyone to try out Windows 10, Chrome OS or the latest Linux releases, or to create virtual "sandboxes" to test pre-release software in. As such I am becoming more convinced there's a VMware workstation setting somewhere which I am missingĪny suggestions and I would be beyond grateful at this point.VMware Player is the easiest way to run multiple operating systems at the same time on your computer. I am not sure if this is a laptop limitation but even this I am not convinced of as a) it worked a few days ago but then overnight decided to not work in the morning and b) the version of this laptop seems capable of supporting this. But for some reason this just fails on the power up. Following the guidance from Cisco it states to have the VIrtualize Intel etc box enabled as per below. I have imported the image both with and without Hyper-V enabled but on both occasions this does not work. Virtualization Intel etc etc is not supported etc etc. I have ran through this document I just found on a different thread but absolutely related:įollowing this guide I kept the memory and processor which was modified during the wizard setup but expanded the disk to 32GB - so should be more than enough. So I have removed the image from both the workstation and the virtualization folder that it was imported to.