However, the procedure for installing the required driver remains the same.
Update : since version 15.5.6 of VMware Workstation, you can use a USB 3.1 controller instead of USB 3.0.
Once you have selected "USB 3.0", a message will appear with a link that will redirect you to the Intel site : To do this, go to the settings of your Windows 7 virtual machine, click on "USB Controller" and select "USB compatibility: USB 3.0". Obviously with the installation of the appropriate driver in the guest OS. Nevertheless, once Windows 7 is installed, it's possible to benefit from USB 3.0 in the guest OS.
Run this command on the drive your VMware tools install is mounted:Ħ. I like to type "D:" to get to my cd-drive, but you can also type the path directly. Open up a command prompt (windows key+r, then type "cmd")ĥ. Go to the menu bar > Virtual Machine >Reinstall VMware Tools, and dismiss the auto-play notification or the setup dialog if they appear.Ĥ. vmwarevm package somewhere else, just in case you need to revert later.ģ. While it's shut down and VMware fusion is closed, back up your virtual machine by storing a copy of your. If there are quotes within the quotes, you do have to include those when you copy the text.ġ. NB: Whenever something is between quotes, assume that everything between the quotes has to be copied or executed. This makes my Windows 10 run like my Windows 7 VM latency-wise, and I figured everyone else could use this info, so here goes (note: This worked for me, but I'm not responsible if your audio breaks): Changing the buffer time didn't make a huge difference, but now I've found a way to install the VMaudio driver and revert to the old es1371 audio device so I can lower the latency.
Ever since I changed to using Windows 10 in my VMware Fusion virtual machine, I've struggled with a fair bit of latency and audio problems when using the standard HDAudio device.