

Hopefully that helps you have a better Parallels experience with your Mac so you. From my research on the web, it sounds like it is not. Using Bootcamp allows Windows OS complete access to all the hardware.

Potentially a third option would be to downgrade Catalina to Mojave but I am not sure that is even possible on a MacBook Pro 16,1. I think the graphics card is compatible with High Sierra.Īny help or advice would be greatly appreciated. Anyone done this? I think the other machines are Mac Pro 3,1 with updated graphics cards (NVIDIA GE Force 5600).

Has anyone tried this with apps like Photoshop, InDesign and Illustrator? Can they share the same file paths so links in inDesign are not messed up? Performance OK?Ĭonvince the others in the office to install High Sierra using the unsupported patch of High Sierra and upgrade their Adobe CC apps to 2020. Run the old Adobe CC apps in Parallels on my Catalina machine. The older macs in the office can not be upgraded due to lack of support for High Sierra. Since I work in Adobe CC on files with others on a constant basis, this is a serious problem. This means we can't collaborate on files as the new CC applications save in a different format than the old (this is totally ridiculous and Adobe deserves to be punished severely for this). Just got my new MacBook Pro 16,1 and while excited, I got a blow when I realized I couldn't install the Adobe CC applications that the other Macs in my office run. Integrate in both directions: copy/paste text, open files in both directions, integrate the file system. Advice on 32-bit applications: parallels or unsupported install of High Sierra? Hey all, Run the Bootcamp partition in a running macOS session.
