The VMware player, virtualisation software for the x64 based computer that uses Windows. You can run macOS Sierra Final on VMware on Windows. This player uses the same virtualization core like the VMware workstation, even though the workstation is not free and has more features than the Player. Select the Mac OS X 10.9.vmx file and select Open. Go to Edit virtual machine settings. Either by right clicking on the Mac OS X 10.9 object on the left side panel or via the tabbed window. You can keep the default resources if you prefer or bump them up, I personally bumped them up to 8 GB and 2 vCPU.
You need to follow this procedure in order to share files between Windows 7 and Mac OS X on VMWare:. Go in your virtual machine settings and select 'Options' tab. Click on 'Folder Sharing' and tick 'Always enabled'. Click on 'Add' button and select a folder you want to share. Confirm virtual machine settings.
![Mac Mac](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125465233/824252262.png)
From 'System preferences' on Mac OS X, select 'Sharing'. Make sure that 'File Sharing' is enabled. From top menu bar, select 'Go' and 'Computer'. You will now see a folder named '/'. This is your shared folder between Windows 7 and Mac OS X. Unlike other answers posted so far, this one explains how to connect the host and guest via VMware Shared Folders.
Install VMware Tools in the VM. If a security dialog pops up saying that a system extension was blocked, ignore it for now. The guest OS should restart after finising.
If after reboot, the security dialog pops up again, to to System Preferences via a button in that dialog and allow the VMware system extension to run. Enable VMware Shared Folders for the VM. Press Add. And add a shared folder (pick any host folder that you have access to and any name). Press Next and OK everywhere until all dialogues close.
Restart the guest OS (the mount in the filesystem (see below) is technically available right away, but Finder doesn't see it until reboot for some reason). You should now have a 'VMware Shared Folders' icon on desktop in which you will see the folder you've created. In the filesystem, it's a vmhgfs mount at /Volumes/VMware Shared Folders:. If there's no icon, check in Finder-Preferences.-General if 'Connected servers' is checked:. If you don't see either the icon or the mount, try uninstalling and reinstalling VMware Tools (this happened for me when an old version was originally installed), then disable and re-enable Shared Folders and reboot.
![Vmware Vmware](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125465233/656503938.jpg)
When I try to run it shows this message: This host supports Intel VT-x, but Intel VT-x is disabled. Intel VT-x might be disabled if it has been disabled in the BIOS/firmware settings or the host has not been power-cycled since changing this setting. (1) Verify that the BIOS/firmware settings enable Intel VT-x and disable 'trusted execution.' (2) Power-cycle the host if either of these BIOS/firmware settings have been changed.
(3) Power-cycle the host if you have not done so since installing VMware Player. (4) Update the host's BIOS/firmware to the latest version. This host does not support 'Intel EPT' hardware assisted MMU virtualization.
Module 'CPUIDEarly' power on failed. Failed to start the virtual machine.