![]() In the lower left corner, click the "+" sign to add an account.In the Preferences pane, click the tab on the top which says "User Accounts":.Click the arrow, then click Preferences, as shown:.In the upper menu you should see a button which looks like a gear, with a down arrow on it: You should see the main Microsoft Remote Desktop app window. Open Microsoft Remote Desktop for Mac, if it isn't already.Proceed to "Configure Microsoft Remote Desktop" With the app open, locate the dock icon for Microsoft Remote Desktop (It will be circular and look like the one above in steps 2,3, and 4), right click it, and select "Keep in Dock" so that the application is easy for you to find later on.You should see a window that looks like this: Once the application is installed, click "Open".On The App Store page for Microsoft Remote Desktop 10, click on "Get":.Visit, the Apple App Store preview page for Microsoft Remote Desktop 10.Whitman recommends using Microsoft Remote Desktop 10, the newest version. What I can tell you, is if you do have a working Mac with installers of anything except High Sierra (haven't figured that one out yet because of a mandatory FW upgrade), you can create your own VM and start from scratch and you can figure out and learn what exactly is going on.Please note: There are currently two version of Microsoft Remote Desktop available in the Apple App Store. vmdk is set up or where it came from so I can't really help you from that step. Boot device has Clover -> Clover fakes a Mac -> OS X starts thinking its a mac.BIOS/EFI in the VM looks for boot device.So simply put, the boot order on the VM is the following: ![]() What Clover EFI does is mimick what Apple wants to see. Mac's being Apple, they are particular in the instructions and look for specific things. The only difference in PC or a MAC is the EFI.
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