![]() I did have VMware with Windows XP on my older IMAC, and that came over in the migration. I moved my MAC OS 'home' directory (little house) over to my second drive to give me space on the SSD. I have two internal drives, the SSD and the 1T drive, so I could have set up boot camp on either, I guess. I set up the Bootcamp for the first time on the IMAC i7. I didn't have boot camp on the older IMAC, would not work with the Core Duo IMAC. If you delete the files backing the XP virtual machine, you won't be able to use it anymore :smileysilly: I'd like to keep my XP running to, if I can Yes, although you don't need to get rid of XP to do this. I wanted to try to use the VMware Fusion with the Windows 7 I loaded into boot camp. If you don't remember, try a program like Grand Perspective to figure out where your space is going. Normal virtual machines are stored in files exactly where depends on where you chose when creating them. Since the majority of space used is to store virtual machines, just uninstalling Fusion doesn't change the used space much. doc files or upgrading iTunes does not touch your MP3s. Uninstalling Fusion does not touch your virtual machines, just like getting rid of Word doesn't delete your. I noticed that I did not get any disk space back, not much anyway. So I uninstalled the other program and VWWare. ![]() There were a couple programs that were listed as causing that. Now after a few weeks I started getting Kernel Panic crashes when using Spotlight. I'd like to keep my XP running to, if I can, but I have no idea what to do next. Am I missing something? Is there a partition somewhere that I cannot get rid of? I'd like to put this all back without the VM partition. ![]() I upgraded to VMware 3.11 I did a boot camp on the new Imac because I could, and installed windows 7 64 bit. To my surprise, the VMware Fusion worked fine. I recently upgraded to the IMAC I7 Quad and the old mac migrated over. I used VMware Fusion on an older IMAC with Windows XP for a few years.
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