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Parallels Desktop: Mac Web Development Must Have

Michael Deering April 17th, 2008

There is kind of a catch-22 here… You can’t do honest web development on Windows without hearing it from the Mac fanboys (I might even label myself a bit of a mac fanboy), but you also cannot forget that despite the fact your uber cool with your Powerbook_Firefox_Firebug_fu the majority of the world still visits your sites with IE on Windows.

IE: Blue, Firefox: Green, Safari: Orange

Above is the browser brake down for Lypp in March. Firefox is higher then you would see on other sites because we target Powerbook_Firefox_Firebug_fu developers with our Lypp API and Rails Plugin.

Virtual Machines are nothing new, I honestly think I have tried the majority of them at some point. Parallels itself I have been using for several months to mimic and experiment with Linux deployment environments.

So what makes me want to blog about it?

Besides the obvious IE browser testing, I have had to buckled down in Microsoft Outlook 2000 in preparation for the release of Lypp’s Outlook Plugin.

Take a look at the above screen-capture… Here are the highlights:
  • Run Windows programs like native Mac applications
  • Windows windows work with Apple Expose’ and transparent windows support
  • Desktop and file sharing
  • iSight Webcam Support! (I can use my webcam with MSN again!)
  • Cut-and-paste and Drag-and-drop support between OSs

Making the switch from Linux to Mac I think I said the phrase “It just works!” ten times a day for the first month. Same goes here with Parallels and my experiences with other VMs. I have been able to squeeze features out of other VMs before but with Parallels “I just works!” and fits into my work flows seamlessly.

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2 comments so far

Avatar by Simeon 23 hours later

I used parallels for a year or so and loved it. However after the 1.1 release of VM Ware Fusion I was a convert. The images ran so much fast in vmware that I could not afford to not switch.

I have been very happy with vmware and am glad I jumped ship.

Avatar by Michael Deering 1 day later

Not going to discount VMWare in anyway. I still use it for managing and creating all my server images and VM environments even those that are not VMWare at the host level. Where Parallels wins out is with the native integration into Mac’s OS. Again there is no workarounds needed for simply working with files between Mac and Windows, hence not interruptions in my work flow.

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