![]() ![]() As I already own a copy of VMware Workstation, I’m not that familiar with VMware Player so thought I’d take a look. Workstation has a lot of great features, and is worth every penny of the license cost in my opinion, however, if you don’t want or need those features, then the free VMPlayer looks to be a great alternative. When away from my home lab, I tend to use VMware Workstation for running my VMs on a laptop. ![]() VMPlayer or, more accurately VMware Player, allows users to create and run virtual machines for free (though a license for the virtual machine’s OS will still be required where applicable). Please do not report bugs against vmware-player, or add bug tasks for vmware-player on current bug reports. While the package page for vmware-player in Launchpad does exist, no packages exist. VMWare Player is currently not available via the Ubuntu repositories. You can improve performance by using the VMware/Tools on your guest OS. You can do so with this command: chmod +x VMware-Player-14.0.0-6661328.x86_64.bundle *If nothing appears, you may need to make the file executable. ![]() Open a terminal then run the package using gksudo: gksudo bash VMware-Player-14.0.0-6661328.x86_64.bundle Install build-essential: sudo apt install gcc build-essential -y A wide variety of appliances (both certified and other-wise) are available from VMware's Appliance Marketplace. An appliance can be created using certain VMware products, or you can download ready-made appliances. ![]() Virtual machines configured with an operating system and applications ready to perform a specific function are called virtual appliances. It can be downloaded for free from VMware. The host operating system runs the VMware Workstation Player, which provides the guest with resources like network access. To the guest operating system (the one running inside the virtual machine), it appears as though it were running on its own PC. VMware Workstation Player (formerly VMware Player) allows you to run entire operating systems in a virtual machine, which runs on top of Ubuntu or Windows. ![]()
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