
Purchase/install/update your preferred virtualisation software (see list above). use a web browser to go to and see if you can view a web page Make sure your actual, physical Mac has a working internet connection e.g. Mac computer for hosting your preferred guest OS preferably with a working Recovery Partition. Preparation NOTE: You will need the following: NOTE: This document was written using a Mac mini (2014 model) with macOS 10.14 Mojave running in 64-bit only test mode and using Parallels Desktop 14.1.2, VMWare Fusion 11.0.2 and VirtualBox 6.0.4. macOS 12 - does not support 32-bit applications, new security/update model. macOS 11 - does not support 32-bit applications, new security/update model. macOS 10.15 - buggy, slow + the new Apple File System (APFS), does not support 32-bit applications. macOS 10.14 - probably a good one to run (as it's the last macOS version able to run 32-bit applications) but we haven't fully tested running this as a virtualised OS yet.
macOS 10.13 - buggy, slow + the new Apple File System (APFS).macOS 10.12 - free, supports most internet/iCloud based services.OS X 10.11 - free, supports most internet/iCloud based services but has secure certificate issues.OS X 10.10 - was slow when installed on a hard disk, does not support latest Apple internet/iCloud based services.OS X 10.9 - was very kludgy and slow when installed on a hard disk.OS X 10.8 - now free, it runs very efficiently in a virtual machine and there are few internet/iCloud based services clogging it up.
Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard (Server) - costs money but you may already be running/want to run this to be able to use PowerPC/Rosetta based applications. If you would prefer to set up/install a virtual machine with a clean Mac OS X/OS X/macOS from scratch please see one of the following articles instead: This article deals with transferring an existing Mac running Mac OS X / OS X / macOS to a virtual machine, or take a bootable storage device/clone/disk image and convert it into a virtual machine. MacStrategy presents this special guide to virtualising a physical Mac/hard disk/clone/disk image file. The ability to virtualise an existing Mac/macOS installation is important and very useful as it is an easy way to continue running your old Mac and also a possible way to run 32-bit applications that do not run on macOS 10.15 or later.
Instructions for installing, setting up and virtualising a physical Mac/hard disk/disk image file Virtualising a physical Mac/hard disk/clone/disk image file Virtualising a physical Mac/hard disk/clone/disk image file Article ID = 232Īrticle Title = Virtualising a physical Mac/hard disk/clone/disk image file