Windows or MacOS and the OS is then running natively, no emulation so no latency. There is an easy enough solution for this, setup your Mac to run Bootcamp and install Windows on that, what you then have is dual-boot machine, you can select which OS you want to boot in to on startup e.g. as the latency will kill it for you and you'll get timing problems etc., I would not recommend trying to use a VM to run a RMS such as RCS64, SSDC, or audio/video editing software etc. They've run Windows10 for many years as long as you can find an 'image' or have the install media and license key.īe careful what you try to do though on a VM, if it's word processing or track design software then no problem, internet browsing fine too however if you try and start watching YT videos or try and do anything that requires some processing power then quickly you will notice latency (lag), in what you do which can render the application in question useless. Click to expand.VMWare is the industry standard software for running Virtual Machines (VMs), and I believe it's available for Macs too, there is also Parallels as you mention and Oracle Virtualbox as well.
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