• Please note this new thread in the Announcements forum regarding updated management of the site. Jeff Duda has agreed to assume ownership and lead management responsibilities during what is anticipated to be a 3-12-month interim period while we perform some updates to the site, including changing the hosting. The staff will do their best to provide timely and transparent updates throughout this transition period.

  • A website update occured last week that rendered some of the page display styles obsolete. If you have logged onto the site and are experiencing a strange or messy appearance, it is likely due to this factor. An inadvertent mistake in the meantime likely made this issue worse. It has hopefully now been fixed. See this thread for details on the fix. --Jeff

Windows on Apple Silicon Macs Question

Has anyone run GRLevel3, GR2Analyst, or Baron Mobile Threat Net on Windows on Parallels Desktop on an Apple Silicon Mac? If so, do they run well, or do they have any issues? Can Windows on Parallels Desktop on an Apple Silicon Mac run Windows apps on two different monitors if I had a Mac that supported a multi-monitor setup?

Thanks!
 

Drew Terril

Staff member
A couple of members who used to be active I know ran it on Parallels, but I've not spoken with or heard from them in a few years. I've not attempted to run Parallels on my MacBook Pro as I still have an older Dell that runs Win 10 that I have all my radio programming and radar software on. That's about all I use Windows for anymore. Daily stuff I'm either on my MacBook or on one of my Linux machines.
 
Sounds good. I used Parallels years ago on an Intel Mac. I was curious about using it on the newer Apple Silicon Macs. I still have a dedicated Windows PC notebook I can run my radar stuff on, but I'm going to likely keep an Apple Silicon desktop Mac around next year for video editing, and I've been considering a dual-screen setup on that Mac. It would be super-fun to have Baron MTN up on one screen and GR up on the other screen when I'm at home tracking storms (on-the-go, I'll have to be confined to a notebook screen).
 

Drew Terril

Staff member
Yeah mine is an Intel as it's 3 or 4 years old now. I haven't messed with the desktop ones at all. I do all my editing on my MacBook Pro. Big reason being because Final Cut Pro is my preferred editing software.
 
I have an Intel iMac Pro plus an M2 MacBook Air. Really enjoying Apple Silicon. I own a license to FCPX but need to get into learning it more. I still feel undertrained when opening it. :)
 

Drew Terril

Staff member
I'm going to date myself a little, but I learned video editing on FCP back in the early 2000s when I was in high school. We were running MiniDV camcorders. This was before even the HDV format of the MiniDV tapes made it into the wild. There's been a fair amount of change with FCP in the two decades between then and now, but I've found it to be much more intuitive to use than Adobe Premiere, which is why I still use it. I think DaVinci Resolve would be the only one I'd consider, but I'm very happy with FCP and have been for over two decades now.
 
I remember MiniDV! I also remember the FCP jump from 7 to X. True that it is more intuitive than Premiere, and no subscription for the desktop version (at least not yet). I got in at a student license, so I got the whole suite for $199.
 
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