It really depends on what you're doing. If you're using OS X apps with heavy read/writes on the hard drive and also running a VM, that's going to slow down performance. It's still very usable on a fast drive, however. I keep mine on a second drive for convenience...more space on my boot drive and the VM gets it's own drive to play on
yeah, i figured w/ heavy stuff it'd help, but was curious on day to day. worst i'd be doing is ripping a dvd from the VM to space on the mac. I doubt i'll be doing any of that while photoshopping, heh. just trying to figure out how to divide up my HDD's righ tnow, ha
I noticed it depends heavily on the drive. My MBP came with a 5400rpm 160gb drive, and I noticed a very significant increase in speed when I moved my vm from my internal drive to an external eSATA 500gb 7200rpm drive. But once I upgraded my internal drive to a 320gb 7200rpm drive, the difference was negligible for day to day tasks. When doing lots of read/writes on either, it makes a very large difference having them separate.
I installed VMWare Fusion / XP on an external drive and one obvious annoyance is that you have to exit / suspend Fusion to allow iMac sleep to function properly (it wakes up right after going to sleep). External hard drive was a usb connected Venus T4U with a WD3200 IDE hard drive in it.
Don't know if I had something configured improperly, but it is a rather significant nuissance.
oh man, VM's on an external USB? I cried when I tried an external FW400.. I can't imagine doing it on USB. But that behavior is pretty much expected.. you have a container that has to manage a system, it's always running
my guess is yes. I'm not sure if Fusion is smart enough to know if your VM goes to sleep, then it can too. Otherwise, I would assume Fusion is always active unless you have the machine paused/suspended from within Fusion.
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