(BTW there are also free VMs for testing IE11 or Edge Legacy but we don't talk about those.)Īgain, VS Code is free for Windows, Mac, and Linux, and VS itself is free for Windows and Mac so you may not need these VMs, but knowing there are Windows developer VMs available free for eval is a super useful way to bootstrap development on any machine. These are for eval or quick testing and expire regularly, so check back to get another if you need to.
NET desktop, and Azure workflows enabled and also includes the Windows Template Studio extension Parallels 17 also contains a virtual TPM (Trusted Platform Module) chip, which lets the system use BitLocker and Secure Boot when running Windows 10 and Windows 11. This evaluation virtual machine includes: This has been super useful when I wanted to get a build running fast on a system to test something or get started TODAY.
That means, there's a pre-configured VM for VMWare or Hyper-V or VirtualBox or Parallels up at right now.
PARALLELS WINDOWS 10 SUSPENDED INSTALL
You may even have a "Take Home" license at your work since the paid version of VS is licensed per-user, not per-machine, so ask your boss if you can install it at home and get the same pro tools you use at work.īUT, did you know (I did not!) that you can download a free time-boxed Windows 10 Development environment for your Mac, Windows, or Linux machine as a virtual machine ? Visual Studio Community IS effectively the Pro SKU and is free for Open Source. You probably know that you can download free developer tools for Windows 10 up at the Windows Dev Center here.