
For example, pressing alt plus h to open the help menu under windows, if not taken care of, will be interpreted as a mac keystroke: command plus h, which will hide fusion from you. If you furthermore leave the fusion key mappings at their defaults, then some windows keystrokes can do unexpected things to your experience. This is especially important for screen readers like NVDA and jaws. Also, you have no insert key, and you must either tell fusion to give you one, or tell windows to remap a key to insert. For example, your alt and windows keys are initially swapped and you can put them back to normal if you wish, or live with them. There are a few beginners issues though, if you're just starting to use fusion. The things you can encounter on windows, can also happen on the mac under fusion. Lastly, yes there are issues with windows, but these are windows issues. In fact, windows on my mac is my best windows experience out of most machines I have worked with.

The stability of windows on the mac is good.
#Map windows insert key on mac drivers
But on the mac, fusion gives you the drivers
#Map windows insert key on mac software
Voiceover can't read the windows screen.ĭepending on what software you use inside windows, and on the hardware you use, how stable the drivers for the hardware are, and a number of other factors, windows may feel unstable. So, to read the windows screen, you will need windows software. To voiceover, if you look at windows from within fusion, then windows looks like an image only. But to windows, it looks as if it is running on a real pc. Once windows is up, it can take input via the keyboard on the mac, and give output on the speakers and on the mac screen. Of course you can use mac stuff from within fusion, but that is only decoration to fusion. Once windows is running, the mac side doesn't really count any longer. Once fusion is running, you tell fusion to load windows inside fusion. Windows and os10 are 2 very different operating systems, and fusion makes them work together for you. But in fact, fusion is the layer that isolates windows from the mac. Fusion will emulate a pc, thus windows will think there's nothing special to the hardware it runs on. With it, you start the vmware fusion program. You will indeed need a screen reader like jaws inside windows. Why not stop pondering and get it, smile.

Yes it is possible to run windows, xp vista 7 etc, on your mac.
