

After installation and restart you can change the screen resolution to another. The interface presented is slightly different to VMWare workstation in the iHackintosh tutorial: to edit the VM’s settings you can either right click on the downloaded VMWare image and ‘Edit VM’, or select the VMWare image and click ‘VM’ then ‘Settings’ in the menu bar in order to mount the relevant ISOs.īear in mind the terms of use specifically exclude Mac OS from being used other than on a Mac, so the above is just for informational purposes. You need to connect it (put a tick ‘Connected’ in virtual machine settings), you will get an icon with VMware tools disk, click on it, click on installer, agree to whatever is there, mount and restart. You need an Intel based host with hardware virtualisation present and enabled, but handily Microsoft offers a free tool called the HAV Detection Tool to check both your processor is capable and that it is enabled in the BIOS.

Turns out you can also follow the same steps in that tutorial using the latest version of VMWare Player (currently at 3.0.0), which is the free virtualisation solution from VMWare. IHackintosh has a great article showing how you can get Snow Leopard (the latest and greatest from Apple) running as a Virtual Machine under Windows by using VMWare Workstation, a custom disk image and a retail copy of Snow Leopard. Running OSX Snow Leopard using VMWare Player in Windows Here is my video tutorial on how to install Mac OS X Snow Leopard in VMwareVMware.
