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Windows 11 is the latest major release of the Windows NT operating system and the successor of Windows 10. Some features of the operating system were removed in comparison to Windows 10, and further changes in older features have occurred within subsequent feature updates to Windows 11. Following is a list of these.
VMware, Inc. did not formally support Player, but there was an active community website for discussing and resolving issues, [7] and a knowledge base. [8] The free VMware Player was distinct from VMware Workstation until Player v7, Workstation v11.
Easy Install support for Windows 8.1 RTM and Windows Server 2012 R2 RTM; Fixes for certain hangs and freezes; 10.0.2 [41] 17 April 2014 The compatibility and performance of USB audio and video devices with virtual machines has been improved. Resolved an issue that prevents a USB device from being connected to Linux RHEL 5 guest operating system.
The Windows XP and Windows Vista/Windows 7 Bluetooth stacks support the following Bluetooth profiles natively: PAN, SPP, DUN, HID, HCRP. The Windows XP stack can be replaced by a third party stack that supports more profiles or newer Bluetooth versions. The Windows Vista/Windows 7 Bluetooth stack supports vendor-supplied additional profiles ...
AirWatch was the name of both the company and a product; however, it was later rebranded to Workspace ONE Unified Endpoint Management (UEM) after being acquired by VMware. The subsequent acquisition of VMWare by Broadcom in November 2023 resulted in the sale of the End User Computing business unit to KKR, with the sale closing in the US and ...
DragonFly BSD has had NetBSD's Bluetooth implementation since 1.11 (2008), first released with DragonFly BSD § 1.12. [8]A netgraph-based implementation from FreeBSD has also been available in the tree since 2008, dating to an import of Netgraph from the FreeBSD 7 timeframe into DragonFly, but was possibly disabled until 2014-11-15, and may still require more work.
VMware ThinApp (formerly Thinstall) is an application virtualization and portable application creator suite by VMware that can package conventional Windows applications [3] into portable applications capable of running on another operating system. According to VMware, the product has a success rate of about 90–95% in packaging applications.
Hellwig's core claim is that ESXi is a derivative work of the GPLv2-licensed Linux kernel 2.4, and therefore VMware is not in compliance with GPLv2 because it does not publish the source code to ESXi. [130] VMware publicly stated that ESXi is not a derivative of the Linux kernel, [131] denying Hellwig's core claim. VMware said it offered a way ...