![]() Integration with Lion’s Mission Control works well. The same thing happens for newly installed Windows applications automatically.” When you turn on this feature, the applications that are not part of the default install for Windows are added to the Applications folder and Launchpad. Instead of loading up the Launchpad with every last Windows app, VMware’s end-user computing director Pat Lee tells me “The approach we took with Launchpad/Applications is that by default users only care about user installed applications being shown on the Mac side. This little hiccup was a side effect of VMware’s generally correct approach of highlighting only the applications that users install themselves. The option to remove the IE9 setup utility from Launchpad did not appear on my first attempt, but I was able to remove the icon from Launchpad after deleting the utility program from the Mac Finder. ![]() Clicking the Option button in Launchpad allows you to delete some, but not all, application icons. The method for removing the IE9 setup utility from Launchpad was not immediately apparent. For example, when I upgraded Internet Explorer 8 to IE9, both Internet Explorer itself and the IE9 setup utility were placed in the Launchpad. While this approach avoids flooding the Launchpad with unnecessary apps, it doesn’t work perfectly. When this happens, the tried-and-true methods of just waiting a long time or restarting the virtual machine usually work. Once I reinstalled VMware Tools I was able to activate Unity, but I still occasionally get error messages that say "VMware Fusion cannot enter Unity," and sluggishness while running Windows apps in Unity mode. Unity mode lets Windows applications run in much the same ways as Mac apps, with each app getting its own icon and window rather than being contained inside a window that holds the entire Windows desktop. Running Windows 7, perhaps the most common virtualization scenario for a typical Mac user, has been relatively smooth, but integration with the Mac desktop is a work in progress. I granted each VM one processor core, while giving Ubuntu 1GB of memory, about 1.5GB to each copy of Windows and 2GB to the extra instance of Lion. Before installation of VMs, you have the opportunity to customize the amount of memory allocated to each VM and whether it can access one or two processor cores. Importing Windows 7 from Parallels took just a couple of clicks, and installing new guest operating systems happens in a similar fashion.
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