3.1
Table Of Contents
- Getting Started with VMware Fusion
- Getting Started with VMware Fusion
- Introduction
- What Is a Virtual Machine?
- What You Can Do with VMware Fusion
- System Requirements for VMware Fusion
- Install VMware Fusion
- Upgrade VMware Fusion
- Start VMware Fusion
- Getting Up and Running
- Create a Windows Virtual Machine with Windows Easy Install
- Create a Virtual Machine from the Boot Camp Partition
- Migrating an Existing PC to a Virtual Machine
- Import an Existing Parallels Desktop or Microsoft Virtual PC 7.0 Virtual Machine
- Using Mac Keyboards in a Virtual Machine
- Sending the Ctrl-Alt-Delete Command to a Virtual Machine
- Quit Your Virtual Machine
- VMware Fusion Resources
- Supported Guest Operating Systems
- Getting Started with VMware Fusion
Getting Started with VMware Fusion 13
VMware, Inc.
3 In the Introduction panel, ensure that Install this operating system is
selected, and click Continue.
4 In the Windows Easy Install panel, enter your Display Name or Account
Name, Password (optional), and Windows Product Key.
The entry in the Display Name field (Windows XP and earlier) appears
in information boxes as the name your Windows software is registered
to. It is not the Windows user name. The entry in the Password field is
the password for the windows administrator account only. VMware does
not provide the Windows Product Key. It is in the packaging for the
Windows operating system CD/DVD.
5 In the Integration panel, indicate how the new virtual machine should
handle basic file sharing.
More Seamless. VMware Fusion shares your Mac’s documents and
applications with Windows. Files on your Mac that Windows
supports open in Windows.
More Isolated. VMware Fusion does not share your Mac’s
documents and applications with Windows.
6 In the Finish panel, click Finish.
VMware Fusion installs Windows. This process can take up to 45 minutes.
After installing Windows, VMware Fusion installs VMware Tools and
powers on the virtual machine.










