Skip to content
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • World
  • Users
  • Groups
Skins
  • Light
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (No Skin)
  • No Skin
Collapse
Code Project
  1. Home
  2. The Lounge
  3. Parallels Desktop and Visual Studio

Parallels Desktop and Visual Studio

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
visual-studiocsharpasp-netdatabaseadobe
49 Posts 26 Posters 0 Views 1 Watching
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • M Marc Clifton

    Um, not to state the obvious, but what the heck. If you're doing Visual Studio development, why didn't you buy a nice Windows laptop?

    Latest Article - Code Review - What You Can Learn From a Single Line of Code Learning to code with python is like learning to swim with those little arm floaties. It gives you undeserved confidence and will eventually drown you. - DangerBunny Artificial intelligence is the only remedy for natural stupidity. - CDP1802

    K Offline
    K Offline
    Kirk 10389821
    wrote on last edited by
    #21

    I have to second/third this. I have a co-worker who is retired and likes putzing with technology. So, he recently went full Mac because his wife loves her Mac, and they are traveling a lot, and he did not want to bring 2 computers... He is NOT doing development. But we require windows to use our software, which he is testing, etc. I dare say NOTHING works easily for this chap. GoToMeeting acts up, loses his mic. Bootcamp (I guess) crashed, he had to rebuild something. He ends up joining meetings directly from his phone because of issues. I guess the ONE good thing: His wife was happy she could check her WEB MAIL, via the Mac. LMAO. I don't have time for these issues. It is not that hard to give my wife one laptop, and me keep mine. Done. Oh, that's what I did. Never looked back. == Someone mentioned Apple slowing down iPhones... Well MSFT windows 7 update a WHILE back (18 months), started Parking my Laptops CPUs. My wonderful Dual Processor, Quad Cores, with 32GB of memory was running like crap. I was ready to upgrade. I am talking 5-10x slow down. Found a CpuCoreParking tool that let me unpark the cores... (And see the parked cores). This was NOT an accident, and reeks of the same thing Apple got caught doing! =

    A 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • G Gary Wheeler

      raddevus wrote:

      Eschew all OSes!!!

      I'm envisioning Visual Studio implemented in Javascript, running on a Chromebook™. Where's the mind bleach...

      Software Zen: delete this;

      R Offline
      R Offline
      raddevus
      wrote on last edited by
      #22

      Gary Wheeler wrote:

      I'm envisioning Visual Studio implemented in Javascript, running on a Chromebook™

      Shhhhh...Don't give them any ideas!! :laugh:

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • G Gary Wheeler

        raddevus wrote:

        Eschew all OSes!!!

        I'm envisioning Visual Studio implemented in Javascript, running on a Chromebook™. Where's the mind bleach...

        Software Zen: delete this;

        K Offline
        K Offline
        KLPounds
        wrote on last edited by
        #23

        Sure as heck wouldnt hurt performance or stability.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • C Chris Maunder

          I bought a Macbook Pro to replace my beloved Macbook Air. I loved that Air, but it was getting a little long in the tooth. I had huge expectations that the Pro would be bigger, badder, faster, and just plain better. It's not. It's absolute crap if you want to use Bootcamp / win10. It's USB C only, meaning connecting it to an external display only works reliably if you reboot before you plug in. The trackpad constantly thinks left click is right click. The screen brightness constantly osculates as it tries to auto-adjust and I get about 3-4hrs max on battery when using Visual Studio. I use *exactly* the same setup on the Air and had insane battery life and no problems whatsoever with displays or the trackpad. So I disable auto-brightness, I bring a mouse with me if I can, plus a charger. Plus all the dongles, of course. And I shut down everything when I need to switch displays (ie each time I switch from home office to Office office). It does, however, work brilliantly when in macOS. You get the lovely double-click pressure on the trackpad, USB-C hot swaps nicely. Font sizes just work on HiDPI screens. So I decided maybe I should just stay in macOS and use Parallels. All the marketing material says Parallels works fast. It's super easy to install. You can even use VS, ISS and SQL on a low-end laptop with 2 cores and barely enough RAM to remember its own name. I dutifully downloaded Parallels. Within minutes I had my Bootcamp partition running in a window. A really, really tiny window. Making that window full screen gives you a big black window with a tiny Windows window in the middle. Must be a driver issue. Maybe that explains why I have no network, either. I install the Parallel tools and reboot. Tiny window still there. Still no network connectivity. I try every option I can find. I try every network option. Every display option. I google and bing and duckduck and disable the folder sharing and tweak this and that and basically do all the simple, obvious things that the interwebz says you must to with Parallels. Still not really functioning properly. I go into coherence mode (Parallels, not me. I was not coherent at this point) so at least I can run and view apps. My goal was to see how Visual Studio would behave. I had a stopwatch ready and had a coffee. I was assuming I'd need razor sharp reflexes to spot the change in app performance given what I'd read. I fire up Visual Studio. I load up our solution. And wait. And wait. And it loads. I open some files...slowly. And ... try ... a

          A Offline
          A Offline
          Aad Brugman
          wrote on last edited by
          #24

          I have been working with a Macbook Pro & Parallels desktop since 2011 (16 Mb) without to many problems with Visual Studio. Definitely not the issues you mention. I am using the same configuration on a Mac Pro now. I have had some issues with the allocation of memory but the technical support of Parallels has been helpful in solving these problems either by email or remote session. Best of luck, Aad Brugman

          C 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • C Chris Maunder

            I bought a Macbook Pro to replace my beloved Macbook Air. I loved that Air, but it was getting a little long in the tooth. I had huge expectations that the Pro would be bigger, badder, faster, and just plain better. It's not. It's absolute crap if you want to use Bootcamp / win10. It's USB C only, meaning connecting it to an external display only works reliably if you reboot before you plug in. The trackpad constantly thinks left click is right click. The screen brightness constantly osculates as it tries to auto-adjust and I get about 3-4hrs max on battery when using Visual Studio. I use *exactly* the same setup on the Air and had insane battery life and no problems whatsoever with displays or the trackpad. So I disable auto-brightness, I bring a mouse with me if I can, plus a charger. Plus all the dongles, of course. And I shut down everything when I need to switch displays (ie each time I switch from home office to Office office). It does, however, work brilliantly when in macOS. You get the lovely double-click pressure on the trackpad, USB-C hot swaps nicely. Font sizes just work on HiDPI screens. So I decided maybe I should just stay in macOS and use Parallels. All the marketing material says Parallels works fast. It's super easy to install. You can even use VS, ISS and SQL on a low-end laptop with 2 cores and barely enough RAM to remember its own name. I dutifully downloaded Parallels. Within minutes I had my Bootcamp partition running in a window. A really, really tiny window. Making that window full screen gives you a big black window with a tiny Windows window in the middle. Must be a driver issue. Maybe that explains why I have no network, either. I install the Parallel tools and reboot. Tiny window still there. Still no network connectivity. I try every option I can find. I try every network option. Every display option. I google and bing and duckduck and disable the folder sharing and tweak this and that and basically do all the simple, obvious things that the interwebz says you must to with Parallels. Still not really functioning properly. I go into coherence mode (Parallels, not me. I was not coherent at this point) so at least I can run and view apps. My goal was to see how Visual Studio would behave. I had a stopwatch ready and had a coffee. I was assuming I'd need razor sharp reflexes to spot the change in app performance given what I'd read. I fire up Visual Studio. I load up our solution. And wait. And wait. And it loads. I open some files...slowly. And ... try ... a

            T Offline
            T Offline
            tbim
            wrote on last edited by
            #25

            I used a MacBook Pro about four years ago after my Windows computer died. I installed Parallels and then a Windows 7 Pro instance inside Parallels, and VS, SQL Server, misc tools inside Windows 7. No problems at all. Ran great. In fact, it was better and faster than my Windows machine (which was Alienware), which I thought was really weird since the Windows 7 via Parallels shared resources with the Mac OS. Both machines had 8GB RAM, but the Mac had a great SSD where the Windows machine had a 7200 RPM hard disk. I have not had to use Parallels recently.

            Mike

            C 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • C Chris Maunder

              I bought a Macbook Pro to replace my beloved Macbook Air. I loved that Air, but it was getting a little long in the tooth. I had huge expectations that the Pro would be bigger, badder, faster, and just plain better. It's not. It's absolute crap if you want to use Bootcamp / win10. It's USB C only, meaning connecting it to an external display only works reliably if you reboot before you plug in. The trackpad constantly thinks left click is right click. The screen brightness constantly osculates as it tries to auto-adjust and I get about 3-4hrs max on battery when using Visual Studio. I use *exactly* the same setup on the Air and had insane battery life and no problems whatsoever with displays or the trackpad. So I disable auto-brightness, I bring a mouse with me if I can, plus a charger. Plus all the dongles, of course. And I shut down everything when I need to switch displays (ie each time I switch from home office to Office office). It does, however, work brilliantly when in macOS. You get the lovely double-click pressure on the trackpad, USB-C hot swaps nicely. Font sizes just work on HiDPI screens. So I decided maybe I should just stay in macOS and use Parallels. All the marketing material says Parallels works fast. It's super easy to install. You can even use VS, ISS and SQL on a low-end laptop with 2 cores and barely enough RAM to remember its own name. I dutifully downloaded Parallels. Within minutes I had my Bootcamp partition running in a window. A really, really tiny window. Making that window full screen gives you a big black window with a tiny Windows window in the middle. Must be a driver issue. Maybe that explains why I have no network, either. I install the Parallel tools and reboot. Tiny window still there. Still no network connectivity. I try every option I can find. I try every network option. Every display option. I google and bing and duckduck and disable the folder sharing and tweak this and that and basically do all the simple, obvious things that the interwebz says you must to with Parallels. Still not really functioning properly. I go into coherence mode (Parallels, not me. I was not coherent at this point) so at least I can run and view apps. My goal was to see how Visual Studio would behave. I had a stopwatch ready and had a coffee. I was assuming I'd need razor sharp reflexes to spot the change in app performance given what I'd read. I fire up Visual Studio. I load up our solution. And wait. And wait. And it loads. I open some files...slowly. And ... try ... a

              T Offline
              T Offline
              TylerMc007
              wrote on last edited by
              #26

              As an alternate approach, try Visual Studio for Mac which I believe was released over the summer. No need to use Parallels unless of course you are trying to use other windows related tools.

              C 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • C Chris Maunder

                I bought a Macbook Pro to replace my beloved Macbook Air. I loved that Air, but it was getting a little long in the tooth. I had huge expectations that the Pro would be bigger, badder, faster, and just plain better. It's not. It's absolute crap if you want to use Bootcamp / win10. It's USB C only, meaning connecting it to an external display only works reliably if you reboot before you plug in. The trackpad constantly thinks left click is right click. The screen brightness constantly osculates as it tries to auto-adjust and I get about 3-4hrs max on battery when using Visual Studio. I use *exactly* the same setup on the Air and had insane battery life and no problems whatsoever with displays or the trackpad. So I disable auto-brightness, I bring a mouse with me if I can, plus a charger. Plus all the dongles, of course. And I shut down everything when I need to switch displays (ie each time I switch from home office to Office office). It does, however, work brilliantly when in macOS. You get the lovely double-click pressure on the trackpad, USB-C hot swaps nicely. Font sizes just work on HiDPI screens. So I decided maybe I should just stay in macOS and use Parallels. All the marketing material says Parallels works fast. It's super easy to install. You can even use VS, ISS and SQL on a low-end laptop with 2 cores and barely enough RAM to remember its own name. I dutifully downloaded Parallels. Within minutes I had my Bootcamp partition running in a window. A really, really tiny window. Making that window full screen gives you a big black window with a tiny Windows window in the middle. Must be a driver issue. Maybe that explains why I have no network, either. I install the Parallel tools and reboot. Tiny window still there. Still no network connectivity. I try every option I can find. I try every network option. Every display option. I google and bing and duckduck and disable the folder sharing and tweak this and that and basically do all the simple, obvious things that the interwebz says you must to with Parallels. Still not really functioning properly. I go into coherence mode (Parallels, not me. I was not coherent at this point) so at least I can run and view apps. My goal was to see how Visual Studio would behave. I had a stopwatch ready and had a coffee. I was assuming I'd need razor sharp reflexes to spot the change in app performance given what I'd read. I fire up Visual Studio. I load up our solution. And wait. And wait. And it loads. I open some files...slowly. And ... try ... a

                K Offline
                K Offline
                Kelly Wilkerson
                wrote on last edited by
                #27

                I used a 2011 MacBook Pro with BootCamp and didn't really have any issues. I then upgraded to a 2013 MacBook Pro and used VMware Fusion to run Windows 7 and Visual Studio (then Windows 10 and VS). I will say that the move to HiDPI/Retina caused some issues, but I was able to get them resolved through different settings adjustments. However, over the course of several macOS releases, things change and it became too much of a hassle to keep things working well. I recently switched to the new Microsoft Surface Book 2 (used Surface Pro 3/4 some too) and have to say that it is hands-down the best laptop I have ever used. If you primarily develop software using Visual Studio, I'd recommend getting the Surface Book 2 (or even an upper-end Surface Laptop or Surface Pro). Keep the MacBook Air in order to compile Xamarin Forms apps for Mac or iOS. Return the MacBook Pro if you can. Not worth the hassle when such good hardware is available. Hope that helps... Kelly.

                C 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • M Marc Clifton

                  Um, not to state the obvious, but what the heck. If you're doing Visual Studio development, why didn't you buy a nice Windows laptop?

                  Latest Article - Code Review - What You Can Learn From a Single Line of Code Learning to code with python is like learning to swim with those little arm floaties. It gives you undeserved confidence and will eventually drown you. - DangerBunny Artificial intelligence is the only remedy for natural stupidity. - CDP1802

                  C Offline
                  C Offline
                  Chris Maunder
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #28

                  Find me a laptop as nice as the Macbooks. (and I'm actually serious here) I've looked at the Dell XPS - the webcam placement is just dumb and it feels plastic-y. The Zenbook is a contender but battery life is pretty awful and the dark blue with gold trim? I just can't do it. Surface book? Crazy expensive and that rubbish hinge makes it too thick. Surface Laptop? No USB-C which means it won't work with my LG monitor. And then there's the whole issue of chargers: I find Microsoft's odd brick-and-side-plug clumsy and heavy. Compare Microsoft[^] to Apple[^]. Seems a small thing but when travelling it makes a big difference having a compact brick with just a single thin USB-C cable that can be detached. Every week - every single week - I trawl through the latest laptops to see if there's one that will replace my current unit but still nothing. The Macbook Air was (in my opinion) the pinnacle. The battery life, the keyboard, the performance. The Macbook Pro has a nicer chassis and screen, but the keyboard is horrid and the bootcamp drivers haven't kept up with the hardware. So yeah I'm fussy, but dammit: if I'm going to spend that much then I'm going to get something I love working on.

                  cheers Chris Maunder

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • J jgrogan

                    Chris - I feel your pain. About 10 years ago, I used bootcamp to run win WinXP/MSSQL/VS and switched to Parallels and later to Fusion on a 2006 MBP. Not much in the difference. More recently, I've been using a Macbook Air and VirtualBox (Win7 Pro with VS2015 and SQL Server) wihtout any real degredation in performance. The VM is on a thunderbolt connected external HD. Are you able to install Parallels on your old MBAir and check how it works? Or try VirtualBox - it's free and you can import a VM. I was thinking about upgrading to a new MBP, but your comments are making me nervous!

                    C Offline
                    C Offline
                    Chris Maunder
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #29

                    Parallels on the old MB Air was pretty much the same. I was planning on trying VM Fusion today but that's been scuttled due to some server issues I need to deal with.

                    cheers Chris Maunder

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • M Munchies_Matt

                      Chris Maunder wrote:

                      The screen brightness constantly osculates

                      I hate it when my screen starts acting as a spongy vent too. :)

                      C Offline
                      C Offline
                      Chris Maunder
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #30

                      I have no idea how I managed to spell it that way. That's imaginative even for my creative spelling efforts.

                      cheers Chris Maunder

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • A Aad Brugman

                        I have been working with a Macbook Pro & Parallels desktop since 2011 (16 Mb) without to many problems with Visual Studio. Definitely not the issues you mention. I am using the same configuration on a Mac Pro now. I have had some issues with the allocation of memory but the technical support of Parallels has been helpful in solving these problems either by email or remote session. Best of luck, Aad Brugman

                        C Offline
                        C Offline
                        Chris Maunder
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #31

                        So there we go: it's possible! The thing that's bothering me is: what's the difference in setups between you and I? I had parallels import my Bootcamp partition. Did you start from scratch or import bootcamp? With Visual Studio are you working on big projects or small? What about services such as SQL Server or IIS?

                        cheers Chris Maunder

                        A 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • T tbim

                          I used a MacBook Pro about four years ago after my Windows computer died. I installed Parallels and then a Windows 7 Pro instance inside Parallels, and VS, SQL Server, misc tools inside Windows 7. No problems at all. Ran great. In fact, it was better and faster than my Windows machine (which was Alienware), which I thought was really weird since the Windows 7 via Parallels shared resources with the Mac OS. Both machines had 8GB RAM, but the Mac had a great SSD where the Windows machine had a 7200 RPM hard disk. I have not had to use Parallels recently.

                          Mike

                          C Offline
                          C Offline
                          Chris Maunder
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #32

                          The SSD is one of the reasons I originally switched to the Macbook. Performance is outstanding.

                          cheers Chris Maunder

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • T TylerMc007

                            As an alternate approach, try Visual Studio for Mac which I believe was released over the summer. No need to use Parallels unless of course you are trying to use other windows related tools.

                            C Offline
                            C Offline
                            Chris Maunder
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #33

                            I'm using that on my other Mac but I need IIS and SQL too.

                            cheers Chris Maunder

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • K Kelly Wilkerson

                              I used a 2011 MacBook Pro with BootCamp and didn't really have any issues. I then upgraded to a 2013 MacBook Pro and used VMware Fusion to run Windows 7 and Visual Studio (then Windows 10 and VS). I will say that the move to HiDPI/Retina caused some issues, but I was able to get them resolved through different settings adjustments. However, over the course of several macOS releases, things change and it became too much of a hassle to keep things working well. I recently switched to the new Microsoft Surface Book 2 (used Surface Pro 3/4 some too) and have to say that it is hands-down the best laptop I have ever used. If you primarily develop software using Visual Studio, I'd recommend getting the Surface Book 2 (or even an upper-end Surface Laptop or Surface Pro). Keep the MacBook Air in order to compile Xamarin Forms apps for Mac or iOS. Return the MacBook Pro if you can. Not worth the hassle when such good hardware is available. Hope that helps... Kelly.

                              C Offline
                              C Offline
                              Chris Maunder
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #34

                              In truth I'm holding out for a Surface Laptop with USB-C and 10hr battery life. However, all this talk of ARM based Windows is interesting, too...

                              cheers Chris Maunder

                              K 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • C Chris Maunder

                                In truth I'm holding out for a Surface Laptop with USB-C and 10hr battery life. However, all this talk of ARM based Windows is interesting, too...

                                cheers Chris Maunder

                                K Offline
                                K Offline
                                Kelly Wilkerson
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #35

                                No doubt the Surface Laptop is a good option. I've been able to get essentially all day use from the new Surface Book 2. Not playing games or watching the Lord of the Rings Extended Edition Trilogy, granted. But getting real development work done using Visual Studio along with Internet research and email. Plus this thing has to drive a 15" HiDPI display, a discrete GPU, and a quad-core i7. I'd say that is a huge accomplishment in battery tech by the Microsoft Surface team. Kelly.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • C Chris Maunder

                                  I bought a Macbook Pro to replace my beloved Macbook Air. I loved that Air, but it was getting a little long in the tooth. I had huge expectations that the Pro would be bigger, badder, faster, and just plain better. It's not. It's absolute crap if you want to use Bootcamp / win10. It's USB C only, meaning connecting it to an external display only works reliably if you reboot before you plug in. The trackpad constantly thinks left click is right click. The screen brightness constantly osculates as it tries to auto-adjust and I get about 3-4hrs max on battery when using Visual Studio. I use *exactly* the same setup on the Air and had insane battery life and no problems whatsoever with displays or the trackpad. So I disable auto-brightness, I bring a mouse with me if I can, plus a charger. Plus all the dongles, of course. And I shut down everything when I need to switch displays (ie each time I switch from home office to Office office). It does, however, work brilliantly when in macOS. You get the lovely double-click pressure on the trackpad, USB-C hot swaps nicely. Font sizes just work on HiDPI screens. So I decided maybe I should just stay in macOS and use Parallels. All the marketing material says Parallels works fast. It's super easy to install. You can even use VS, ISS and SQL on a low-end laptop with 2 cores and barely enough RAM to remember its own name. I dutifully downloaded Parallels. Within minutes I had my Bootcamp partition running in a window. A really, really tiny window. Making that window full screen gives you a big black window with a tiny Windows window in the middle. Must be a driver issue. Maybe that explains why I have no network, either. I install the Parallel tools and reboot. Tiny window still there. Still no network connectivity. I try every option I can find. I try every network option. Every display option. I google and bing and duckduck and disable the folder sharing and tweak this and that and basically do all the simple, obvious things that the interwebz says you must to with Parallels. Still not really functioning properly. I go into coherence mode (Parallels, not me. I was not coherent at this point) so at least I can run and view apps. My goal was to see how Visual Studio would behave. I had a stopwatch ready and had a coffee. I was assuming I'd need razor sharp reflexes to spot the change in app performance given what I'd read. I fire up Visual Studio. I load up our solution. And wait. And wait. And it loads. I open some files...slowly. And ... try ... a

                                  R Offline
                                  R Offline
                                  RafagaX
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #36

                                  Most likely is still a drivers issue, also i recommend you to verify how many cores your virtual machine has, given that, since Windows Vista, Windows is not happy with anything less than 2 cores. To be honest, i would try doing a clean install from within Parallels in a Virtual Hard Drive.

                                  CEO at: - Rafaga Systems - Para Facturas - Modern Components for the moment...

                                  C 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • R RafagaX

                                    Most likely is still a drivers issue, also i recommend you to verify how many cores your virtual machine has, given that, since Windows Vista, Windows is not happy with anything less than 2 cores. To be honest, i would try doing a clean install from within Parallels in a Virtual Hard Drive.

                                    CEO at: - Rafaga Systems - Para Facturas - Modern Components for the moment...

                                    C Offline
                                    C Offline
                                    Chris Maunder
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #37

                                    RafagaX wrote:

                                    To be honest, i would try doing a clean install from within Parallels in a Virtual Hard Drive

                                    I will give that a try.

                                    cheers Chris Maunder

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • K Kirk 10389821

                                      I have to second/third this. I have a co-worker who is retired and likes putzing with technology. So, he recently went full Mac because his wife loves her Mac, and they are traveling a lot, and he did not want to bring 2 computers... He is NOT doing development. But we require windows to use our software, which he is testing, etc. I dare say NOTHING works easily for this chap. GoToMeeting acts up, loses his mic. Bootcamp (I guess) crashed, he had to rebuild something. He ends up joining meetings directly from his phone because of issues. I guess the ONE good thing: His wife was happy she could check her WEB MAIL, via the Mac. LMAO. I don't have time for these issues. It is not that hard to give my wife one laptop, and me keep mine. Done. Oh, that's what I did. Never looked back. == Someone mentioned Apple slowing down iPhones... Well MSFT windows 7 update a WHILE back (18 months), started Parking my Laptops CPUs. My wonderful Dual Processor, Quad Cores, with 32GB of memory was running like crap. I was ready to upgrade. I am talking 5-10x slow down. Found a CpuCoreParking tool that let me unpark the cores... (And see the parked cores). This was NOT an accident, and reeks of the same thing Apple got caught doing! =

                                      A Offline
                                      A Offline
                                      Alister Morton
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #38

                                      Kirk 10389821 wrote:

                                      Well MSFT windows 7 update a WHILE back (18 months), started Parking my Laptops CPUs. My wonderful Dual Processor, Quad Cores, with 32GB of memory was running like crap. I was ready to upgrade. I am talking 5-10x slow down.

                                      Hmmm, that sounds a familiar refrain. My Win 7 machine has also begun to run like treacle in the last 12-18 months.

                                      K 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • A Alister Morton

                                        Kirk 10389821 wrote:

                                        Well MSFT windows 7 update a WHILE back (18 months), started Parking my Laptops CPUs. My wonderful Dual Processor, Quad Cores, with 32GB of memory was running like crap. I was ready to upgrade. I am talking 5-10x slow down.

                                        Hmmm, that sounds a familiar refrain. My Win 7 machine has also begun to run like treacle in the last 12-18 months.

                                        K Offline
                                        K Offline
                                        Kirk 10389821
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #39

                                        The software is here: [Coder Bag: CPU core parking manager v3](http://www.coderbag.com/Programming-C/CPU-core-parking-manager-v3) One note: if you are accidentally there because you said "ultra-quiet", you will notice the fans being much loader. (As if I care, because the other option was throwing the machine into the wall)

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • C Chris Maunder

                                          So there we go: it's possible! The thing that's bothering me is: what's the difference in setups between you and I? I had parallels import my Bootcamp partition. Did you start from scratch or import bootcamp? With Visual Studio are you working on big projects or small? What about services such as SQL Server or IIS?

                                          cheers Chris Maunder

                                          A Offline
                                          A Offline
                                          Aad Brugman
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #40

                                          In 2011 I changed from Windows PC to Mac and bought and installed Parallels desktop on my Macbook Pro. I made an image of my Windows PC with Parallels Transporter Agent. The image also included the Visual Studio version (2010). Transferred image to Mac, opened it in Parallels and started using it. So I did not use any Bootcamp partition. And I realize (now) that your situation/set up is different because you are not migrating from Windows. The VS projects I have worked on are not huge but also not small and I also use SQL server. Over the years I have evolved to Parallels 12, VS 2017, SQL server 2016. With Parallels 12 I had a problem and had to reach out to Parallels technical support. I had already migrated to Mac Pro with 32 Mb and assigned 20 Mb to my Parallels VM. In the online session the helpdesk also looked at my settings and told me to assign only 4 Mb to the VM. So far everything is working fast enough for me. So I still think that creating a support ticket could help you. Happy new year. Aad Brugman

                                          1 Reply Last reply
                                          0
                                          Reply
                                          • Reply as topic
                                          Log in to reply
                                          • Oldest to Newest
                                          • Newest to Oldest
                                          • Most Votes


                                          • Login

                                          • Don't have an account? Register

                                          • Login or register to search.
                                          • First post
                                            Last post
                                          0
                                          • Categories
                                          • Recent
                                          • Tags
                                          • Popular
                                          • World
                                          • Users
                                          • Groups