We had a fix, but it wasn’t an ideal situation and I personally am not a fan of telling users to replace components within the Fusion application package itself. Recently we were somewhat surprised by a late change to El Capitan that was preventing the installation of El Capitan in a virtual machine, which I wrote about on my personal blog over here. When we released VMware Fusion 8 and Fusion 8 Pro, we announced that we would fully support El Capitan, and we’re making good on that promise. Other folks however can tolerate the occasional bug. Folks with mission critical applications that they depend on tend to be more hesitant when risking the stability of their systems. This decision is of course going to be different for every user depending on their needs. The reviewers are generally saying the same thing: Upgrade today, it’s worth it. The community has had the time to dig into El Capitan with great reviews from Ars Technica, Macworld, Gizmodo, 9to5Mac and others. As with all major OS updates, often the question isn’t simply “Should I upgrade?”, but rather “Should I upgrade right now or wait until the first point release?”. Mac users worldwide rejoiced as Apple released the public general availability of OS X 10.11 El Capitan today.
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