VMWare Fusion worked great on my Intel-based MacBook for work for years. I ran Windows and Linux virtual machines, sometimes several at a time. It more or less seamlessly integrated the Windows environment into macOS, and the Linux VMs I ran were stable. I wouldnāt say I loved it, but it did the job. Iād give it 4 stars for that period of time.
Unobtainable
After Broadcom bought VMWare, though, I canāt seem to find it. Not an individual license for work. Not a free license for home. The website still lists it and Workstation (the Windows counterpart), though I havenāt found any links to that page on the website ā only external search results. And it doesnāt help.
- The download links there just go to the Broadcom customer login.
- The customer site wonāt let me see anything unless I fill in corporate purchasing info that only makes sense in an enterprise business-to-business context.
- The only way I can get it to show download links is to back to the old blog post and click on the links there.
- Those download links wonāt work without me answering more screening questions.
- The site wonāt acknowledge that I already answered those questions.
On top of that, while Broadcomās website let me register an email address with a +
in it, it uses one of those multi-step login forms where you enter just the username/email first, click a button, and then enter the passwordā¦but it keeps trying to decode the +
as a space, so I have to reload the login form in a way that itāll keep the correct username when I enter my password.
I suppose it could be a browser compatibility thing, but I spent at least an hour at a time on three different occasions across two and half months on two different computers (one macOS, one Linux) with both Firefox and Vivaldi.
Meanwhile I missed the November announcement that itās now free for everyone, which, OK, greatā¦but it still wonāt show me the products in my account unless I go back to Mayās blog post, and it still wonāt let me download without answering the screening questions, and it still wonāt acknowledge that Iāve answered those screening questions, so I still canāt download it.
Technically Available
Itās almost like Broadcom didnāt notice that VMWare had a consumer software division when they bought the company, and they donāt know how to deal with that. So theyāve made it availableā¦in the sense that the plans for demolishing Arthur Dentās house were āon display.ā
So I have no idea how well it runs on Apple Silicon. And it doesnāt matter whether I like the product or not, because I canāt use it.
Alternatives
I was able to download and install Parallels for my new ARM work MacBook in a matter of minutes. I didnāt even have to wait for IT to purchase the license, just install the trial edition and add the license afterward.
As for home, I think Iāll experiment with UTM a bit. I prefer one-time purchases over subscriptions (and of course free is nice!), but the home edition of Parallels is at least a reasonable price for what it does.