In its day, Windows® XP was a great operating system. I ran
it for many years on my main work computer. It was considerably better than
some of its successors: even though I worked at Microsoft® when Windows Vista
was released, I never moved to Vista. And don’t even get me started on the
debacle that was Windows 8—“a schizophrenic productivity killer,” wrote David
Pogue. So, in the overall OS rating game, Windows XP was a winner.
However, Microsoft dropped support for Window XP on April 8,
2014. This means no security updates or technical support for Windows XP, and
PCs running Windows XP after this date are vulnerable to viruses and malware.
So I can’t recommend running Windows XP on a PC connected to the Internet.
But what if you just have to run Windows XP?
Maybe you use an application that only runs on Windows XP,
and the application developer has gone out of business. Maybe you have an
internal, line-of-business Windows XP application that you just can’t live
without, but there is no time or money to get it updated. (Don’t think these
are actual scenarios? The US Navy is paying millions to Microsoft for support
of Windows XP, so this does happen. And tech observers are stating that XP will
be around for years.)
Don’t have millions to pay for XP support? Just run Windows
XP in an isolated virtual machine.
While by default, a VM is connected to the Internet and has
tight integration with your Mac®, you can turn these both off with just a
couple of mouse clicks and get an isolated VM.
Even though your Windows XP VM is isolated, you can still
move files into and out of it with a USB thumb drive, as you can see in this
short video:
https://youtu.be/Rr1EgTXaOqE
So, how can you create a Windows XP VM? There are two ways:
1.Install from scratch: If you have an XP installation CD
and you can hook a CD drive to your Mac, then creating a brand new Windows XP
VM is easy.
This Parallels Knowledge Base article will help you go
through the VM creation process. Remember to configure the VM with no network
connection even before you begin installation. Windows XP can be infected with
malware during the installation process.
2.Migrate a hardware PC into a VM: If you have access to a
PC with Windows XP, you can use the migration feature in Parallels Desktop for
Mac to create a VM. This Parallels Knowledge Base article will help you get
started with the migration. The migration process will copy everything on that
PC into the VM, so be sure that there are no viruses or other malware on that
PC.
If you really, really need to run Windows XP, an isolated VM
in Parallels Desktop provides a very cost-effective solution.