Here is the short solution for those looking to run Windows 11 on an M1 Apple machine. Parallels.com. It works, is easy, and has been reliable. I do run Windows 11 on my Intel iMac using VMware's trial/test "product". If I had to guess which will break first - it would be the VM Fusion. Parallels is in the business to stay, and with the knowledge and OK from Microsoft - just my opinion.
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Ask yourself this: Why doesn't the competition tell you to buy a retail Windows product license and download an ISO from Microsoft to run Windows 11 as a virtual machine on an M1 Mac using their product? Why do they continue to tell you to download a (unsupported) Windows Insider Preview HyperV disk image in order to run Windows 11 in their product?
All software is a risk. My handicap of a major problems (e.g. VM stops working) is
@Technogeezer thank you for your thoughtful feedback. I would take a bit of issue with "not supported." To my knowledge, parallels absolutely will support the product you buy from them. As for support from Microsoft - as far as we know Microsoft may already be supporting parallels (behind the scenes). What is stated in PR releases, and what is being actually done in the real world may be different. I think we probably agree that any mission-critical situation should not dabble in any of this. As a "PS," I think the whole TPM thing is a big mistake by Microsoft that will be slowly become less of an issue. Just a gut feeling and I am not an expert.
One thing to note here: since 1-1-2022 there is a new law in the EU concerning software and online services. If the product/service does not do what it says it does or when features get taken away after some time then the manufacturer can be hold liable. That in general means they'll have to refund you fully. If you state that you can run Windows as a vm which all of a sudden is no longer possible then you are going to be in for some great legal fun...
Besides that I think some people aren't aware of the fact that VMware is a huge player in the enterprise when it comes to virtualisation and some other stuff. With Fusion supporting containers and also being able to connect to ESXi instances I very much doubt that the main use case is to run a Windows client on a Mac. It wouldn't surprise me that the cloud plays a large role and that cloud is primarily being run on Linux and containers. For companies there are better options that VMware provides should you need to provide a Windows environment to your users (options that require much simpler systems management because it isn't heavily fragmented). Fusion isn't the only product that has gotten container support and is being ported to arm64.
I have just updated the document with a link to a recent VMWare CMTY Podcast I find interesting. Michael Roy @Mikero (product manager for VMware desktop hypervisor products). discussed not only his experiences with M1 Macs, but offered hints about where he sees Fusion fitting into a bigger picture. I think it's required viewing (as VMware doesn't give roadmap information about future product plans).
And if there is indeed an exclusivity agreement between Microsoft and Qualcomm, Microsoft would be at the mercy of Qualcomm's lawyers if they announced support for a product that Qualcomm is supposed to have an exclusive agreement for.
IMO, the length of time that the non-supported use of a product is ignored means nothing. Microsoft isn't getting paid for Windows 11 on the M1 Mac, so do you really think they care if a small minority of users squawk if Microsoft enforces not running on unsupported configurations? 2ff7e9595c
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