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With our fully featured Pro products being made free for personal use and paid for commercial use, we are discontinuing their lesser counterparts VMware Workstation Player and VMware Fusion Player. At this time they will no longer be available for purchase.
Run Windows, Linux and BSD virtual machines on a Windows or Linux desktop with VMware Workstation Pro. Build, test and demo software across an array of different devices, platforms and clouds.
Find VMware products to modernize apps, accelerate your move to the cloud, and support the anywhere workspace securely.
Virtual machines are software computers that provide the same functionality as physical computers.
We’re thrilled to announce a significant change that reflects our commitment to making VMware Fusion and VMware Workstation more accessible than ever. Starting November 11, 2024, these powerful desktop hypervisor products will be available for free to everyone—commercial, educational, and personal users alike.
Optimize cloud infrastructure with VMware for app platforms, private cloud, edge, networking, and security.
You can create a new virtual machine in Workstation Pro by using the New Virtual Machine wizard, clone an existing Workstation Pro virtual machine or virtual machine template, import third-party and Open Virtualization Format (OVF) virtual machines, and create a virtual machine from a physical machine.
This new feature allows you to configure Virtual Machines to start automatically when your PC boots. Encryption for Player. To deliver a Windows 11 supported TPM, VM encryption features have been extended to Workstation Player product to seamlessly create Windows 11 virtual machines
VMware Workstation is a program that allows you to run a virtual computer within your physical computer. The virtual computer runs as if it was its own machine. A virtual machine is great for trying out new operating systems such as Linux,...
Do you want to create a virtual machine on your Windows PC? You can use VMware to install other operating systems, including earlier versions of Windows and Linux, without having to dual-boot or format your hard drive. This wikiHow article teaches you how to create a new virtual machine in VMware on your PC.