Mac users are not the only ones that were excited about the new macOS release, Big Sur. Organizations also benefit from several new features.
The new version’s reworked user interface is its most easily discernible difference. Program icons now have rounded corners, the Control Center menu for changing basic settings can be found in the upper right corner of your screen—that would make you think of iPad OS and the Control Center looks like the one on a tablet’s display. So, Apple users will need some adjustment to the new user interface.
More safety
Much more important, however, is that Apple has changed several details of how organizations can roll out and manage Macs. One of the changes most relevant to security is that infiltrated configuration profiles are outdated. Downloaded profiles are singled out and must be installed by hand. This prevents adware programs from installing themselves using malicious configuration profiles. At the same time, this means that the enterprise package will not allow to install configuration profiles using the command line. With Big Sur, installing a configuration profile will always require active user intervention.
Other aspects of managing Macs will also change. Examples are that administrators can decide to enforce system updates to be installed at a system reboot and that user updates cannot be postponed to “later”. In addition, company IT departments can remove applications from managed Macs.
iPad-apps on Macs
Many Mac applications are already based on those running on their mobile siblings. This is where Apple’s “Catalyst” helps. Catalyst apps coming from iOS already include Apple Maps, the official Twitter app, and the integrated Calendar. With Big Sur, this is expected to be extended significantly in future. On the one hand, Apple is pushing software developers to produce cross-platform applications. On the other, future Macs based on “Apple Silicon” (instead of Intel-processors) will even be able to support iOS apps natively—provided the manufacturer will permit that. This can possibly save software costs.
With Parallels Desktop App Store Edition, you can run the following operating systems in a virtual machine on your Mac: - Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista®, and XP - macOS Big Sur 11.0, macOS Catalina 10.15, macOS Mojave 10.14, macOS High Sierra 10.13, macOS Sierra 10.12 - Most Linux distributions System requirements. Ready for macOS Big Sur 11.0 Parallels engineers have been putting thousands of hours into Parallels Desktop 16 for Mac development and testing to make sure it fully supports macOS 11 Big Sur. Most of issues we ran into have been resolved, some have workarounds, and there are just few we’re still working hard on to resolve.
This article provides step-by-step instructions on how to block the installation of macOS 11 Big Sur. Later, when ready, you will need to remove the blocking package to allow the upgrade to Big Sur. Installing the macOS Big Sur Blocker. The macOS Big Sur Blocker is a system agent that monitors running processes. Since the beta version of macOS Big Sur has just been released, the compatibility of Parallels Desktop and macOS Big Sur hasn't been fully tested yet by the Parallels Engineering Team. On the other hand, your feedbacks will help us to test and cover as many scenarios as possible.
Higher level of data security
From macOS 10.15 Catalina onwards, system files have already been stored in a separate partition, which, as a rule, only offers read access. Big Sur comes with a further improvement of system security: A Signed System Volume (SSV). In practical terms, this means that each system file is signed using an encrypted hash code. Malware will have a much harder time than before trying to manipulate system files. If macOS detects at boot time that files have been compromised the system will not start anymore.
Updates installed in the background
IT departments set great store by all the company’s devices being current in their patch status and all system updates being duly rolled out. The update process of macOS has always been quite invasive, however. The system cannot be used while an installation is in progress and the Mac will reboot several times. Starting with Big Sur, updates can now to be installed more unobtrusively and in a less disruptive way.
Good bye OS X
Not a new feature but a noteworthy change: The new macOS release is a leap ahead for Apple not just in a technical way. Big Sur takes leave of “OS X” and the “10.x” version number. Instead of counting on to 10.16, Big Sur continues with macOS 11. In all, Mac OS X accompanied Mac users over a period of two decades, from the PowerPC architecture to x86 on to x64.
At least since Apple has been releasing updates on a yearly basis and free of charge, the previous way of counting releases has led to an inflation of release numbers as the current Catalina release of 10.15 clearly shows. A new naming system was no less than logical given the operating system’s redesign and its additional support for future ARM-Macs.
Macos Big Sur Parallels Desktop Download
Learn more:
- Apple | Mac Catalyst
- Eclectic Light | Big Sur’s Signed System Volume: added security protection
- ZDnet | New Apple macOS Big Sur feature to hamper adware operations
- Apple Developer | What’s new in managing Apple devices
Macos Big Sur Parallels Desktop
Apple has at last released macOS Big Sur! First previewed at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference in June 2020, and then finally released to the world in November 2020, macOS Big Sur has had the longest beta development cycle of any macOS release in recent history.
The silver lining: engineers at Parallels® used this time to work in lockstep with their Apple counterparts in an effort to ensure that users will have the best possible Parallels Desktop® experience once migrated to macOS Big Sur.
The greatest amount of Parallels engineering work came in response to a significant change in the underpinnings of macOS Big Sur. As a Mac user, you may have seen dialogs (like the one shown in Figure 1) when using macOS Catalina or macOS Mojave.
The change in the macOS necessitated the re-architecture of Parallels Desktop (seen in Figure 2).
While this figure illustrates what may appear to be a small change, it required the largest amount of engineering work in Parallels Desktop 16 and the equivalent of 25 man-years of engineering effort. This change means that even more of the performance and security of Parallels Desktop will be derived from Apple’s updates to the internal architecture of macOS going forward.
In addition to the work diagrammed in Figure 2, the Parallels engineers have added a number of new features to Parallels Desktop 16, and to bundled products Parallels Toolbox and Parallels Access, including:
- macOS Big Sur support
- 3D support in macOS VMs
Learn more about these features in Video 1.
Parallels Desktop is ready for you when you decide to migrate to macOS Big Sur. Let us know in the comments when you will be upgrading, and then, how the migration went!
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