Parallels Desktop 14 supports macOS Mojave, saves storage

Posted:
in Mac Software edited August 2018
PC virtualization software maker Parallels on Tuesday released the latest version of its eponymous cross-platform Mac solution, offering a slew of new features to customers, including faster start times, storage savings and support for Apple's upcoming macOS Mojave.

Parallels Desktop 14


Highlighting Parallels Desktop 14 for Mac are enhanced storage optimization tools that, depending on a user's virtual machine configuration, can save as much as 20 gigabytes of disk space. Notably, saving memory states with the Snapshots tool takes about 15 percent less space, while Parallels Desktop itself is approximately 20 to 30 percent smaller than it predecessor.

Parallel Desktop 14's new optimization feature takes both Mac and Windows storage mechanisms into account, which the firm claims results in significant savings. A new Free Up Disk Space dialog offers suggestions on how to best utilize space, for example resuming and shutting down virtual machines, managing VM snapshots and reclaiming disk space. Users of the Pro edition can take advantage of an addition archive tool.

Parallels Desktop 14


System performance has also been improved, with up to 10 percent faster boot times, 80 percent faster application launch times, quicker VM suspend times and coherence frame rates as compared to Parallels Desktop 13. Coherence is an integrated view mode that allows access to Windows applications alongside Mac apps. Other enhancements include up to 30 percent faster suspend operation on APFS partition and up to 130 percent more frames per second in Shared Camera.

Graphics handling also receives a boost with improved OpenGL support and improvements in SketchUp 2017/2018, CTVox, DIALux 8 and OriginLab.

In addition to behind-the-scenes optimizations, the latest Parallels Desktop delivers popular Windows features to Mac. New for 2018 is the ability to use Microsoft Ink to edit Office for Windows documents. Ink gestures, or handwritten input commands, are supported in Microsoft Word, while pressure-sensing stylus support has been added to a number of Windows apps including PowerPoint, CorelDRAW, Fresh Paint, and Leonardo, as well as Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop.

For owners of top-tier MacBook Pro hardware, Parallels Desktop 14 delivers a comprehensive set of Touch Bar controls that builds on pre-existing configurations offered in previous versions of the virtualization software. Users can now access Touch Bar sets for Microsoft Visio and OneNote, SketchUp, AutoCAD, Revit, Quicken, QuickBooks and Visual Studio.

Further, Touch Bar controls an be customized with the Parallels Desktop Touch Bar Wizard and Touch Bar XML Authoring, granting expanded options to create and access Windows application shortcuts from Apple's graphical function strip.

Parallels Desktop 14


Looking ahead, Parallels Desktop 14 will be ready for use with Apple's macOS Mojave when the operating system sees launch this fall. Users can expect support for Dark Mode, expanded Quick Look functionality, advanced screenshot capabilities and Camera Continuity with connected iOS devices.

Alongside the marquee Parallels Desktop 14, Parallels Toolbox for Windows and Mac has also been updated with new features. On the Mac side, Toolbox now includes a screenshot page feature, as well as resize image and free memory functions. For Windows, new presentation mode, switch resolution and clean drive tools have been added.

Existing users of Parallels Desktop 12 and 13 can upgrade to Parallels Desktop 14 for $49.99, or sign up for a Parallels Desktop for Mac Pro Edition subscription for $49.99 per year. New customers can purchase a Parallels Desktop 14 subscription for $79.99, or buy a perpetual license for $99.99.

Parallels Desktop 14 Pro Edition and Business Edition both cost $99.99 per year. Availability begins on Aug. 23. A 14-day trial can be downloaded from the Parallels website.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 12
    TTTTTTTT Posts: 2member
    Is there still a 8GB RAM limit in the standalone version?
    Parallels Desktop 13 allows a maximum of 8GB of RAM for any given virtual machine, making my Windows 10 Installation choking to death. 
    Thinking of switching to VMWare Fusion for this reason only - Parallels is great otherwise!
    ols
  • Reply 2 of 12
    The 8 GB limit for the Home version is still there. :(
    ols
  • Reply 3 of 12
    TTTTTTTT Posts: 2member
    Guess it’s a good time to switch then (after nearly a decade of using Parallels). Fusion is cheaper, and a single license can be used on multiple devices (afaik the Parallels “Pro” subscription allows up to 5, but the else it’s per-device licensing). 
    Fusion has also heavily been working on performance and security improvements, while Parallels mostly seems to focus on making things prettier, with performance suffering in the process...
  • Reply 4 of 12
    dewmedewme Posts: 5,335member
    For users of Parallel and Fusion the yearly upgrade that is aligned with the latest version of macOS has become part of the de facto upgrade pricing for macOS itself. Sure, not having to pay Apple for the macOS upgrade is great, but the total cost of ownership associated with macOS upgrades is still far from zero. Nothing controversial, just the reality of maintaining version alignment and hygiene for the full suite of apps on your machine. Fortunately, for at least most cases with Fusion, their macOS aligned upgrade is not mandatory and you can continue to use the older version of Fusion if you can do without all the new bells and whistles. VMWare is admirably transparent about this, so it comes down to personal choice, but they usually entice you with just enough new bling to pull the upgrade trigger. I've been using Fusion 10.1.2 with macOS Mojave Beta with Windows 10 Pro and various flavors of Ubuntu VMs and have not experienced any negative effects. It works very well for me but I know there will be a Fusion 11 upgrade offer any day now.
    GG1olsjony0
  • Reply 5 of 12
    fred1fred1 Posts: 1,112member
    I have High Sierra on my MacBook and am using Windows 7 in Parallels.  Any known issues with Windows 7 and Parallels 14?
  • Reply 6 of 12
    GG1GG1 Posts: 483member
    dewme said:
    For users of Parallel and Fusion the yearly upgrade that is aligned with the latest version of macOS has become part of the de facto upgrade pricing for macOS itself. Sure, not having to pay Apple for the macOS upgrade is great, but the total cost of ownership associated with macOS upgrades is still far from zero. Nothing controversial, just the reality of maintaining version alignment and hygiene for the full suite of apps on your machine. Fortunately, for at least most cases with Fusion, their macOS aligned upgrade is not mandatory and you can continue to use the older version of Fusion if you can do without all the new bells and whistles. VMWare is admirably transparent about this, so it comes down to personal choice, but they usually entice you with just enough new bling to pull the upgrade trigger. I've been using Fusion 10.1.2 with macOS Mojave Beta with Windows 10 Pro and various flavors of Ubuntu VMs and have not experienced any negative effects. It works very well for me but I know there will be a Fusion 11 upgrade offer any day now.
    Thanks for this synopsis, very helpful to a newbie (me) to these virtualization programs.
  • Reply 7 of 12
    It is visrtualization software so you need paid license for guest OS. So do not talk about features of apps nattive to other OSes than macOS. It is just that every version does the virtualization better and guest system apps seem to be as if they were host system native.

    I abandoned Parallels long time ago. Whenever I need other guest systems I use free Oracle VirtualBox instead. It does sufficient job and if any sophisticated app is needed on macOS I do not see reason I would support other OS apps - I'd rather look for native macOS app and support this development. Do you really wonder then why development teams have preferences to develop for Windows if you run WIndows native apps on Mac's? Not smart.
  • Reply 8 of 12
    TTTT said:
    Guess it’s a good time to switch then (after nearly a decade of using Parallels). Fusion is cheaper, and a single license can be used on multiple devices (afaik the Parallels “Pro” subscription allows up to 5, but the else it’s per-device licensing). 
    Fusion has also heavily been working on performance and security improvements, while Parallels mostly seems to focus on making things prettier, with performance suffering in the process...
    I tried switching to Fusion one year for one of the reasons you mentioned - because a single license allowed me to use three devices. I also had a couple of VMWare containers that Parallels was not able to import. However, I didn't even last a year for two critical reasons - one was that I found Fusion to be completely unreliable when using images stored on an external drive (I had multiple kernel panics when I tried this), but mostly because Fusion (at least version 7) did not have the ability for multiple displays to be used separately. I would often have one of my displays showing one of my guest OSes while the other display showed the host OS. Parallels allows this. Fusion did not. When I swiped to change one monitor's space between host and guest, the other display would also switch. It was extremely annoying and did not fit my workflow.
  • Reply 9 of 12
    dewmedewme Posts: 5,335member
    TTTT said:
    Guess it’s a good time to switch then (after nearly a decade of using Parallels). Fusion is cheaper, and a single license can be used on multiple devices (afaik the Parallels “Pro” subscription allows up to 5, but the else it’s per-device licensing). 
    Fusion has also heavily been working on performance and security improvements, while Parallels mostly seems to focus on making things prettier, with performance suffering in the process...
    I tried switching to Fusion one year for one of the reasons you mentioned - because a single license allowed me to use three devices. I also had a couple of VMWare containers that Parallels was not able to import. However, I didn't even last a year for two critical reasons - one was that I found Fusion to be completely unreliable when using images stored on an external drive (I had multiple kernel panics when I tried this), but mostly because Fusion (at least version 7) did not have the ability for multiple displays to be used separately. I would often have one of my displays showing one of my guest OSes while the other display showed the host OS. Parallels allows this. Fusion did not. When I swiped to change one monitor's space between host and guest, the other display would also switch. It was extremely annoying and did not fit my workflow.
    You can always download a trial version of Fusion 10 to see if it fits your needs before you switch from other virtualization solutions. 
  • Reply 10 of 12
    dewme said:
    For users of Parallel and Fusion the yearly upgrade that is aligned with the latest version of macOS has become part of the de facto upgrade pricing for macOS itself. Sure, not having to pay Apple for the macOS upgrade is great, but the total cost of ownership associated with macOS upgrades is still far from zero. Nothing controversial, just the reality of maintaining version alignment and hygiene for the full suite of apps on your machine. Fortunately, for at least most cases with Fusion, their macOS aligned upgrade is not mandatory and you can continue to use the older version of Fusion if you can do without all the new bells and whistles. VMWare is admirably transparent about this, so it comes down to personal choice, but they usually entice you with just enough new bling to pull the upgrade trigger. I've been using Fusion 10.1.2 with macOS Mojave Beta with Windows 10 Pro and various flavors of Ubuntu VMs and have not experienced any negative effects. It works very well for me but I know there will be a Fusion 11 upgrade offer any day now.


    I understand where you are coming from, but there is always the option of using BootCamp to install Windows - in which case your only expense is the Windows licence.


    Saying Parallels or Fusion is associated to the TCO of macOS is like saying an Office365 or Adobe CC subscription adds to the TCO of macOS.

    jony0
  • Reply 11 of 12
    ricksricks Posts: 1member
    Not clear to me if the Parallels Desktop Home upgrade price of $49.99 is per computer or per base license.  I have one newer iMac running version 13 with High Sierra and a backup 2011 iMac with High Sierra (and stuck there) running version 12. Since the base Home license allows up to 5 computers, it seems like I should only have to buy one upgrade.  Anybody know?

    Thanks.
  • Reply 12 of 12
    Parallels does not support Bitdefender anti-virus. As I use the Bitdefender Box I must use VMware.
    This problem with Bitdefender and Parallels has been around for years.
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