Works well. Doesnt like dynamic scaling and the mouse is a bit odd with a mightymouse. Need to tweek the screen resolution, the xorg.conf, and settle for a few odities. For example when you shut down the guest the VM doesnt detect the fact the system is halted, forcing you to stop or reset the VM manualy.
Though I do have to admit I am finding the right click on the mighty mouse being the same as copy/paste in windows and terminals quite appealing.
EDIT: Ok it HATES changing the display. Switching resolutions causes the VM to lose track of where the mouse is.
For clariification of what has been said before I made a few changes in xorg.conf and set the resolution to "1680x1050" so now that works better.
This is helpful when doing to remove 800x600 thing under xorg.conf (like Jim said). So instead of the line reading:
Modes ""
it should read:
Modes "[your max resolution]"
If you set it like the first example it just makes a huge window without any reason to the size. If you normally have the ubuntu VM set to full screen use the screen's max resolution and Xorg will never spit out a resolution bigger then you can handle. If you use it in a window boot to your windows VM. Set the parallels window to what ever size you like and look under display properties. It will give you the exact screen resolution the virtual machine window is using (if you have parallels tools installed under windows). Use that in place of [your max resolution].
If you do the above then Xorg will make your login splash screen and all other screens no larger then that. Its now just a simple matter of logging into your account and using the drop down dialog under screen resolutions (its under user settings) from 800x600 with the higest option being your max resolution. Every option is now something your monitor can theoretically support!
Last edited: May 17, 2008