![]() ![]() ![]() Right click My Computer and select Map Network DriveĢ. Part2 - Map a Network Drive to the Shared Foldersġ. You need to map a network drive to the shared folder. Click the Enabled button and, optionally, the Read Only button, then click OKĪt this point, VMware now has the shared folder attached, but your computer still does not know about it yet. Drill down to the firewire device listed under devices and select itġ0. Give the shared folder a name of your choice, click on the double arrow and then select Choose. Click on the + button and the select add a shared folder.Ĩ. Click on the Settings light switch icon and select Shared Foldersħ. Click on Shared Folders and check the box for Enabled at power on. In the Fusion Virtual Machine LIbrary window, select the BootCamp VM and then click on Settings.Ĥ. Start Fusion but don't start the BootCamp VM.ģ. Attach the 1394 device to your MAC and make sure it shows up on under Devices in Finder.Ģ. Part 1 - Enable Shared Folders in your Virtual Machineġ. ![]() Via the Shared Folders option in VMware, you can now get read/write or read-only access to a 1394 device that is attached to your MAC. Parallels has the instructions to do this at. To get access to a 1394 attached device, enable Shared Folders to point to the attached device. After further investigation, both Fusion and Parallels support 1394 via Shared Folders, but not natively hooked through the virtual devices, like USB is. A trusted friend of mine told me that Parallels supported 1394.
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