After the installation is done, you will be asked to restart Windows. This will be what ultimately integrates your Mac with your Windows desktops. The very first time Windows restarts, "Parallels Tools" will be installed.Once the installation concludes, you can open up Windows by clicking on the "Power" button in the list of the Parallels Virtual Machine.All Intel-based Macs are compatible with both 32 and 64-bit versions of Windows: From Windows XP to Windows 10. Click on " Continue" and the Windows installation will commence.Type in a name for the virtual machine and select the directory or location for the Parallels Desktop.Once you're done selecting, click on " Continue". You will be asked to select how you wish to use Windows: Whether for productivity, games only, software development, design, etc.
Leave the " Express installation" as it is, input the key and click " Continue".You will be taken to a Windows product key window.
You can even switch to the manual mode, locate the source for the Windows installation, and choose it by clicking on " Select a file…".iso disc image or even a bootable USB drive.
You can easily install Windows either from a DVD or the more popular.
Any font file from the "old world" will end up "UNIX Executable" on a Sync client (All Mac OS X 10.10-10.11) This clearly has something to do with extended attributes or maybe beyond that. Tinkering with "chmod" doesn't help either. The file is intact ("diff" shows it's the same file) but you can't use it. They end up being "UNIX Executable" on other Sync clients. They can not however be mailed as ZIP files, sent by FTP or put on a network drive (even OS X Server with AFP) without getting crippled. They can be copied from a CD to the hard drive and between local hard drives with problems. No data fork. They still work flawlessly on a workstation and is indeed indentified as "font files". These old font files are PS type 1 and consists of "suitcase" for displaying the right characters on screen (FFIL) and a supporting printer font (LWFN). Up until now every font file were OTF or TTF.
They use the "Live list" functionality". Works like a charm!.until somebody needed to use "that old font file from 1994 for a project". We've set up a really nice solution with Sync and RightFont at an ad agengy.