![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() When Apple Silicon Mac was first announced during the keynote at WWDC on June 22 of this year, Apple demoed a Parallels Desktop for Mac prototype running a Linux virtual machine flawlessly on Apple Silicon. Good news: A new version of Parallels Desktop for Mac that can run on Mac with Apple M1 chip is already in active development. It is important to note that currently available versions of Parallels Desktop for Mac cannot run virtual machines on Mac with Apple M1 chip. However, virtual machines are an exception. Fortunately, our Parallels Access, Parallels Toolbox, and Parallels Client software worked smoothly even before Parallels rebuilt them as universal binaries. The transition to Mac with Apple M1 chip should be smooth for most Mac applications, thanks to Rosetta technology. Parallels is excited to see the performance, power efficiency, and virtualization features that are brought to the Mac with Apple M1 chip. A version of the Parallels Desktop hardware emulation virtualization software developed expressly for for Apple M1 Macs is in development, Parallels says.
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