![]() ![]() ![]() I have attempted to change the screen resolution from within the guest machine itself, but I notice for both Debian and Fedora 1024x768 is the largest display they are allowing. Fedora 22 has the same issue as Debian: it runs 1024x768 screen resolution, when it is supposed to be occupying the whole screen. I have six other Virtual machines installed on my PC, for each of the following OSs (each 64-bit):Īll but the Fedora 22 machine runs seamless mode just fine (i.e., full screen occupies all 1366x768 pixels of my screen and not just 1024x768 of it). ![]() Neither "Seamless Mode" nor "Auto-resize Guest Display" options are allowed under the, "View" drop-down menu. If the topic of virtualization interests you, check out some more of our posts on the subject.I would like to adjust the screen resolution for my Debian 8.1 Virtual Machine (running in VirtualBox 5 on 64-bit Windows 10) from 1024x768 to 1366x768 (which for me would be full screen). There are many other options available for virtualization, including the free UTM app which allows you to easily run Windows 11 on an Apple Silicon Mac for example, but there’s also paid solutions including VMWare and Parallels. Go to to find the appropriate download, listed as “Developer preview for macOS / Arm64 (M1/M2) hosts”.As usual, VirtualBox is completely free to download and to use. While technically in beta, anyone can get access to the developer preview beta ARM build of VirtualBox through the VirtualBox website. It does this by virtualizing hardware (that you can adjust to allocate RAM, storage capacity, etc), so the operating system itself doesn’t know that it’s not running on actual hardware. VirtualBox is virtualization software that allows you to run other operating systems in containers on your Mac directly from the application, for example you can run Linux or Windows directly within VirtualBox, and without having to use dual-booting or anything else. ![]()
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