F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems You'd set up a virtual machine on Manjaro, install a Windows 10 ISO, then run a macOS VM inside it.

You'd set up a virtual machine on Manjaro, install a Windows 10 ISO, then run a macOS VM inside it.

You'd set up a virtual machine on Manjaro, install a Windows 10 ISO, then run a macOS VM inside it.

H
Hypersnake
Member
208
11-28-2016, 10:25 PM
#1
Hello, you're looking to run both WIN10 and macOS VMed on the same operating system. Right now you're using Manjaro as your host OS. Since help from search results isn't clear, here are some options you might consider:

- Try setting up a dual-boot or dual-system configuration where both OSes coexist.
- Explore virtualization tools like VirtualBox or VMware to run macOS and Windows side by side.
- Consider using a single OS with multiple virtual environments (e.g., via Proxmox or KVM) to host both platforms.
- For the third VM, you could use a lightweight VM manager like VirtualBox or VMware Workstation to forward it to another monitor.

Many users have set this up by installing macOS and Windows separately but using shared network resources or virtual machines. If you want a more seamless experience, look into container solutions like Docker or LXC for isolated environments. Let me know if you'd like step-by-step guidance on any of these approaches!
H
Hypersnake
11-28-2016, 10:25 PM #1

Hello, you're looking to run both WIN10 and macOS VMed on the same operating system. Right now you're using Manjaro as your host OS. Since help from search results isn't clear, here are some options you might consider:

- Try setting up a dual-boot or dual-system configuration where both OSes coexist.
- Explore virtualization tools like VirtualBox or VMware to run macOS and Windows side by side.
- Consider using a single OS with multiple virtual environments (e.g., via Proxmox or KVM) to host both platforms.
- For the third VM, you could use a lightweight VM manager like VirtualBox or VMware Workstation to forward it to another monitor.

Many users have set this up by installing macOS and Windows separately but using shared network resources or virtual machines. If you want a more seamless experience, look into container solutions like Docker or LXC for isolated environments. Let me know if you'd like step-by-step guidance on any of these approaches!