They also now support APFS support for installing Mac guests via the recovery partition, and will support macOS 11.0 Big Sur on its release. The chief highlight for home Mac users is clearly the addition of VM Fusion Player, a free entry-level version of Fusion for personal use that supports the creation and deployment of VMs, containers, and Kubernetes clusters.įusion Player and Pro both now support eGPUs, allowing Mac users with external graphics to offload graphics rendering to these devices as opposed to their Mac’s built-in graphics solution. Guests also gain support for the latest Windows 10 and major Linux OS updates. Workstation users also gain a new Dark Mode feature that seamlessly integrates with the host’s dark mode settings in Windows 10.
Linux hosts gain support for the Vulkan Rendering Engine on PCs running integrated Intel GPUs. VM Workstation can now co-exist happily with Hyper-V mode in the latest (2004) build of Windows 10. They also come with the usual tweaks to improve performance (particularly in the fields of VM operations and file transfers), plus added support for virtual USB 3.1 devices. Both products also gain the ability to run, build, push or pull OCI containers using VMware’s command-line vctl tool alongside the added support for Kubernetes.īoth Workstation and Fusion virtual machines are also now capable of supporting up to 32 virtual CPUs, 128GB RAM and 8GB VRAM.