See I thought so and thanks for the reassurance. I wouldn't dream of
posting illegal or questionable content on here but I can see why one
member brought this into discussion.
Regards Chris
Clap along if you feel like a room without a roof!
On 05/04/2014 15:26, Piotr Machacz wrote:
yeah, it'
yeah, it's legal as long as you're running on apple hardware. What isn't is if
you virtualise OS X on Windows. This is why Fusion has built in OS X support,
but workstation ir player don't.
On 04 Apr 2014, at 09:41 pm, Chris Apple boy wrote:
> Hi all
> Someone can correct me on this but I thou
Hi all
Someone can correct me on this but I thought recent versions of Os X;
the license states that up to two copies can be installed including any
copies running inside a virtual machine. If this is in fact illegal then
may I sincerely apologize in advance and say it was my total ignorance
o
I am not a moderator, however, please note that this is, by all means, illegal
and is a violation of Apple's terms of use, you perform this operation at your
own risk.
Thanks,
Josh
Sent from my iPhone
> On Apr 4, 2014, at 3:11 PM, christopher hallsworth
> wrote:
>
> Hi all
> In recent versio
Hi all
In recent versions of Vmware Fusion it is possible to create a virtual machine
running recent versions of Os X client and all versions of Os X server. To do
this:
1. In the Mac App Store Download the version of Os X you wish to run in your
virtual machine. If you can go for Mavericks but