User`s guide

Integrating Mac OS X and Your Virtual Machine 165
Sharing Web Applications
When you work with Mac OS X and Windows applications simultaneously, you may notice that
clicking a hyperlink in a Windows application opens the corresponding web page in the browser
set as default in the Windows guest OS and clicking a hyperlink in a Mac OS X application
opens the web page in the Mac OS X default browser.
With Parallels Desktop, you can set a single web application for opening similar web pages
from both Mac OS X and Windows applications.
You can specify different Internet applications for opening each of the following types of web
pages:
Web pages. Web pages accessible through the HTTP and HTTPS protocols.
Email. Links in the mailto format.
Newsgroups. Links in the news. format.
FTP. Locations accessible through the FTP protocol.
RSS. RSS feeds.
Remote access. Locations accessible through the Telnet and Secure Shell (SSH)
protocols.
For setting up shared web applications, use the Internet Applications pane of the Virtual Machine
Configuration (p. 168) dialog.
To open the Internet Applications pane:
1 Select a virtual machine and open its configuration by choosing Configure from the Virtual
Machine menu.
2 Click the Internet Applications item in the left pane of the Virtual Machine Configuration (p.
168) dialog.
Note: You can specify different shared web applications for each of your Windows virtual
machines that have Parallels Tools installed.
For more information about setting up shared web applications, refer to Internet Applications
Settings (p. 186).
Usage Tip
Sharing the web applications can be useful in software development and web site building to
check the compatibility with different Internet browsers. Create several virtual machines and
install the necessary Internet browsers in each of them. Right-click the file you want to check
and specify the browser to use through Open With.
Note: The Open With list displays only the Internet browsers available through the virtual
machines that are currently running.