
Parallels 11 brings Windows 10 and Cortana to the Mac
Parallels 11 has just been released with support for Windows 10, which can now be emulated within OS X. What's more is the Parallels team has brought Microsoft's personal assistant to the Mac.
Parallels 11 has just been released with support for Windows 10, which can now be emulated within OS X. What's more is the Parallels team has brought Microsoft's personal assistant to the Mac.
Apple has released Boot Camp 6, an update to the company's dual-booting assistant that let's the Mac run the latest and greatest Microsoft has to offer: Windows 10. Boot Camp 6 will support Windows 10 on Mac hardware going back all the way to 2012, which is a lot. If you want to make doubly sure you can dual-boot, here's the complete list!
Starting today, Apple's Boot Camp—the utility that allows for dual-booting on a Mac—now supports Windows 10. The support requires Boot Camp 6 on OS X Yosemite and a Mac from 2012 or later, and allows for drivers to be updated via Apple Software Update or the Boot Camp Assistant.
Microsoft is releasing an early version of its Windows Bridge for iOS tools to the open source community, in order to receive feedback and participation from developers. The final version of the tools, which will covert iOS apps so they work on Windows 10, will be released this fall.
Happy Saturday, iMore! Because Rich is awesome, he's letting us run some of his Mac-themed comics from the Diesel Sweeties archive on weekends. Bonus comics, woo! We hope you enjoy.
Windows 10 has officially launched, but it seems as though the update is causing some issues with iTunes sync. If you are experiencing an issue syncing after your update, here's your fix.
An important caveat for VMware Fusion users who have virtual Windows PCs they're planning to upgrade to Windows 10: Don't use the
If you're not getting Windows 10 Insider Preview builds as fast as you'd like, try toggling this setting to hasten them.
Ed: Welcome to this week's edition of The Pixel Project: a weekly comic from Diesel Sweeties' Rich Stevens on Apple, technology, and everything in-between. Today: The Mystery of Windows X Read more comics from the Pixel Project on iMore.com.
Microsoft has announced at Build 2015 that their new tools will allow developers to compile the Objective-C code for their iOS apps to work on Windows 10. The new toolkit in Visual Studio will allow devs to build Windows Store-ready apps from Objective-C code used for iOS and OS X, and will support touch controls as well as keyboard and mouse. The tools also allow for integration for...