04-15-2021 09:24 AM
Seems to work for me too with LabVIEW 2020 SP1. Only LabVIEW box checked as Chris said.
However no success installing LabVIEW Community - BSOD after reboot (Inaccessible Boot Device). Any idea ?
Rejean
04-15-2021 10:33 PM
Hey,
Thanks for sharing this useful information. Could you please help me to try installing DAQ assistances,and see if it is work? Lots of my NI project need these kind of tools,thanks!
11-19-2021 02:26 PM
I finally managed to get LabVIEW (2020 SP1) running on my new M1 Pro with Parallels 17 and Windows 10 ARM – after several tries resulting in an "Inaccessible Boot Device" error upon restart, the fix was simply to untick the "Disable Windows fast startup box". Hopefully this might be useful to others.
11-19-2021 04:36 PM
@MC54 wrote:
I finally managed to get LabVIEW (2020 SP1) running on my new M1 Pro with Parallels 17 and Windows 10 ARM – after several tries resulting in an "Inaccessible Boot Device" error upon restart, the fix was simply to untick the "Disable Windows fast startup box". Hopefully this might be useful to others.
You know, that's interesting because NI recommends that you disable fast startup in BIOS for a physical PC.
11-19-2021 06:05 PM
Just curious, what benefit do you get running LV inside a VM (Parallels) of Win10 on Mac (other than you don't have access to a Windows machine) than natively on MacOS?
11-19-2021 11:40 PM
@santo_13 wrote:
Just curious, what benefit do you get running LV inside a VM (Parallels) of Win10 on Mac (other than you don't have access to a Windows machine) than natively on MacOS?
I think the original issue was that it won't run on the latest Mac chip.
11-22-2021 03:21 AM - edited 11-22-2021 03:22 AM
@billko wrote:
@santo_13 wrote:
Just curious, what benefit do you get running LV inside a VM (Parallels) of Win10 on Mac (other than you don't have access to a Windows machine) than natively on MacOS?
I think the original issue was that it won't run on the latest Mac chip.
But it does as Chris pointed out, although it's not a simple point and click experience. More likely it was a license issue as pre 2021 you had separate licenses for Windows, Mac and Linux.
11-23-2021 08:48 AM
@rolfk wrote:
@billko wrote:
@santo_13 wrote:
Just curious, what benefit do you get running LV inside a VM (Parallels) of Win10 on Mac (other than you don't have access to a Windows machine) than natively on MacOS?
I think the original issue was that it won't run on the latest Mac chip.
But it does as Chris pointed out, although it's not a simple point and click experience. More likely it was a license issue as pre 2021 you had separate licenses for Windows, Mac and Linux.
I should check my verb tenses. I should've said "didn't" run, instead, implying that it does run now.
11-23-2021 08:54 AM - edited 11-23-2021 08:56 AM
@santo_13 a écrit :
Just curious, what benefit do you get running LV inside a VM (Parallels) of Win10 on Mac (other than you don't have access to a Windows machine) than natively on MacOS?
Actually the main reason is that I need to deploy VIs to Windows machines eventually. Since I cannot build them from the macOS LabVIEW version, I use Parallels.
02-24-2022 01:58 PM
@santo_13 wrote:
Just curious, what benefit do you get running LV inside a VM (Parallels) of Win10 on Mac (other than you don't have access to a Windows machine) than natively on MacOS?
VMs are very handy for having different versions of LabVIEW installed separately. We're using VMWare in our team on Windows, Linux and Intel Macs, sharing the same virtual machines between us.
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