Designer’s Toolbelt: Parallels
Most of the projects that I work on are for the military or industry. As such, all of the software that I design runs on Windows. Even the web-based applications are built for IE without cross-browser support being a priority. In the past, I’ve had to remote into old, slow Windows machines or VMs to run IE or native applications. Now that I have a Mac with an Intel processor, I’m able to run Windows on it. I installed it yesterday using Parallels.
Parallels made the installation a piece of cake. All I had to do was insert the install CD, enter a license number, and away it went. I turned my attention to other work and in a matter of minutes, I heard the Windows startup sound.
Parallels has a few different view modes. You can run Windows in a window, where the window contains the Windows desktop, and all applications are opened in windows within the Windows window (catch that?). You can run it full screen so that you don’t see your Mac’s desktop at all. The best way to use it is in “Coherence” mode. This hides the Windows desktop altogether and presents each window as a window within your Mac OS X environment. Pressing the minimize button results in the window moving to the dock, genie effect and all. Windows can be moved between spaces, and they are sorted by Exposé. Clicking the Parallels icon in the dock results in the display of the Start Menu. Notifications are displayed in the standard Windows speech bubble in the bottom-right corner of the screen. The clipboard is shared between operating systems, and you can drag and drop between Windows and Mac applications. Network connections were made automatically without needing any of my input.
I showed it to one of the developers I work with, and he was surprised at how fast it runs. I’m impressed by the seamlessness with which they have integrated the Windows UI with the Mac OS. If you have to run Windows for testing, this is the way to do it.
I must admit, though, I do feel a little dirty having done it.