![]() It’s best to take the button away altogether, by right-clicking that gray area, selecting Customize Toolbar… and dragging the button off.īeyond the confusion, you don’t want anyone forgetting that Fusion is running at all. Plus, if you hit that button when no Windows programs are running, the VM disappears and you have to click View > Single Window to get it back. That’s fine if you really want to switch between all your programs seamlessly, but in many cases, you want to remind your users that they’re in their Windows environment. That button enters Fusion’s Unity mode, which strips away the Windows desktop and only shows the Windows applications that are running. VMware, however, can be blamed for the “Unity” button. So updating the operating system again caused an unexpected full-screen incident. In later Mac OS X versions, that function was moved to the green button in the upper left, and to make it do what it used to do (zoom, or enlarge the window to fit the content), one had to hold the Option key as well. ![]() ![]() Not accustomed to Macs, she panicked, of course. ![]() She’d pressed that button and the Windows virtual machine had taken over her whole screen. When I tweeted that last summer, my user was still on Mac OS X 10.8, which still had a dedicated full-screen button in the upper right corner of most windows.
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