![]() ![]() You first need to create a VM using vmc on the command line, start Windows with the command line, license it, customize it, update it, install the Parallels Tools bundle, and then shut Windows down. So I break out the Administrator's Guide and try doing this the right way. I refreshed the policy on the devices and the Parallels icon showed up in the launcher! Silly me, instead of reading the documentation, I just clicked on the Parallels icon, thinking that I'd be able to set up a VM that way. I went into my Google Admin console, put a couple devices into a new OU, and then assigned the trial licenses to that new OU. The trial was good for 5 devices and expired in about 30 days. In the ticket, I asked them to please have someone get in touch with me from the Enterprise Sales team.Įventually, a very nice guy did get in touch, and he provided me with a trial license key. I already had a business account with Parallels for a different product, so I created a support ticket in the Parallels support system. Then you get an email that tells you that Parallels appreciates your business, and if you could just please wait a little bit longer. ![]() Then you wait for someone at Parallels' Enterprise sales team to CALL you. Instead of getting started with a free trial, it just takes you to a web form where you have to fill out contact details for you and your company. I've been excited about this integration ever since it was announced back in June (and way earlier than that if you're the kind of person who pores through the Chromium codebase and ).Īnyway, October 20 rolls around, and Google sends out an email with a link to get started with a free trial for Parallels Desktop! So I click the link and am instantly disappointed. ![]()
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