And previously, Microsoft said it didn’t have any news to share when The Verge asked about it making a change to allow Boot Camp on ARM Macs.
We may be some time away from Microsoft changing its mind on its Windows ARM policy for running natively on Macs (if it does).But in the meantime, The 8-Bit discovered that developer Alexander Graf was able to make some tweaks to get his M1 Mac running the OS as a virtualization and even highlighted that “It’s pretty snappy here 😄.”.
He was able to achieve this by running the Windows ARM64 Insider Preview by virtualizing it through the Hypervisor.framework.This framework allows users to interact with virtualization technologies in user space without having to write kernel extensions (KEXTs), according to Apple.
Apple Silicon Macs still to come: New iMac, more