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joelw135

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Oct 15, 2008
553
279
New Jersey, USA
I purchased an iMac 24" 3.06 which I will be running Windows XP Pro in a virtual machine. Do I install the new Nvidia drivers in Windows XP or does the Windows XP installation use the Mac OSX drivers?
 

sushi

Moderator emeritus
Jul 19, 2002
15,639
3
キャンプスワ&#
Even when I am using Fusion?
My bad. I misread your original statement.

When you install Fusion or Parallels, it creates a virtual environment to run Windows. Personally, I just let the WinXP install the appropriate drivers. Then run Windows update. Seems to work okay for my basic Office, browsing, and e-mail type needs.

Is this question related so a specific app?

Are you trying to run a game?
 

joelw135

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Oct 15, 2008
553
279
New Jersey, USA
My bad. I misread your original statement.

When you install Fusion or Parallels, it creates a virtual environment to run Windows. Personally, I just let the WinXP install the appropriate drivers. Then run Windows update. Seems to work okay for my basic Office, browsing, and e-mail type needs.

Is this question related so a specific app?

Are you trying to run a game?

The problem arises with my Photography program (Paint Shop Pro Ultimate) as it needs the latest Nvidia drivers to function properly.
 

Guiyon

macrumors 6502a
Mar 19, 2008
771
4
Cambridge, MA
The problem arises with my Photography program (Paint Shop Pro Ultimate) as it needs the latest Nvidia drivers to function properly.

That shouldn't be an issue because you aren't really using an Nvidia card. When running in a virtualized environment the OS only sees what VMWare/Parallels wants it to see. In this case Windows won't know that you really have an Nvidia (or ATI) graphics. As for drivers, you should install whatever driver package comes with the virtualization software.

As for which virtualization software to choose, I use VMWare Fusion on all my machine and the latest 2.0 release is excellent. I don't like Parallels too much as the UI was a mess and I had a few stability issues but I haven't used it since the original release so I don't know how much thing have changed since then.
 

joelw135

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Oct 15, 2008
553
279
New Jersey, USA
That shouldn't be an issue because you aren't really using an Nvidia card. When running in a virtualized environment the OS only sees what VMWare/Parallels wants it to see. In this case Windows won't know that you really have an Nvidia (or ATI) graphics. As for drivers, you should install whatever driver package comes with the virtualization software.

Thank you for the explanation, now I hope it works. I am new to Mac and I am a little overwhelmed.
 

sushi

Moderator emeritus
Jul 19, 2002
15,639
3
キャンプスワ&#
That shouldn't be an issue because you aren't really using an Nvidia card. When running in a virtualized environment the OS only sees what VMWare/Parallels wants it to see. In this case Windows won't know that you really have an Nvidia (or ATI) graphics. As for drivers, you should install whatever driver package comes with the virtualization software.
Good explanation.

Thank you for the explanation, now I hope it works. I am new to Mac and I am a little overwhelmed.
Welcome to the Mac and MacRumors. :)
 

joelw135

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Oct 15, 2008
553
279
New Jersey, USA
Good explanation.


Welcome to the Mac and MacRumors. :)

Thank you, that explains a huge amount. But when installing Windows on my iMac I still install drivers when I load from Boot camp is that correct? O I guess that is called direct boot and not in a virtual machine.
 

RemarkabLee

macrumors 6502a
Nov 14, 2007
562
9
Thank you, that explains a huge amount. But when installing Windows on my iMac I still install drivers when I load from Dashboard is that correct? O I guess that is called direct boot and not in a virtual machine.

You're thinking of Bootcamp. For Bootcamp use, Windows operates in a native environment, i.e. direct with the hardware so in that case, you will need to use Windows drivers in the same way as a PC.
 

joelw135

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Oct 15, 2008
553
279
New Jersey, USA
You're thinking of Bootcamp. For Bootcamp use, Windows operates in a native environment, i.e. direct with the hardware so in that case, you will need to use Windows drivers in the same way as a PC.

Thanks, I feel confident, or at least a little more at ease now.
 
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