

The Apple hardware requirements for support DirectX 11 3D Acceleration in a virtual machine is currently: While I’m on this topic, it’s probably best to deal with DirectX support on Apple Hardware. It seemed to work for everybody but now I can report the exact error message and verify the fix with a qualified reason.
#VMWARE FUSION 11 MAC PRO MID 2010 UPGRADE#
My students reported errors like this earlier in the year and I suggested they upgrade to VMware Fusion 12. How VMware works on the macOS is important to my students because we give them two alternatives for setting up MySQL on osMac: one is inside a Linux VM and the other uses Docker ( my notes from January this year for creating a Docker instance on the macOS).
#VMWARE FUSION 11 MAC PRO MID 2010 MOVIE#
As I speculated earlier, the out of memory error may be linked to how VMware uses Hyper-V but that’s a shot in the dark (or a random guess not the Peter Sellers movie of the same name that reprises his role as Inspector Jacques Clouseau). The error message, in this context, is most likely raised because the product is incompatible with how VMware Fusion manages memory at some level in the macOS Big Sur (11.6.*) version. The VMware Fusion 11 Release Notes clearly state that it only supports macOS Mojave (10.14) and macOS Catalina (10.15), which narrows the context, or use-case, for the error.

Often users are looking for a specific fix, which means an answer to a specific use-case or problem context. It strikes me that this error message may be linked to a VMware virtualization issue with Hyper-V memory management with a combination of VMware (11.5.*) and macOs Big Sur (11.6).įor that reason, you can’t believe discussion threads unreservedly whether they’re from Apple or other vendors because they’re targeted to a universal context.

While these three suggestions are useful when you’re macOS is truly running short of memory, it appears the same error can simply mean the Application isn’t supported on the new macOS release. You might go down any of three provided generalized rat holes, like paring running applications or the other nonsense on the Apple Discussion Board. The pretty Apple Dialog box is quite misleading unless you place it in context of a VMware application problem that occurs when you upgrade from one to another version of the macOS.
