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Table Of Contents
3 Under Removable Devices in the Settings window, click Sound Card.
4 Click Remove Sound Card.
5 Click Remove in the confirmation dialog box.
Add a Camera to a Virtual Machine
You can enable one or more cameras on a virtual machine.
Prerequisites
Verify that the following conditions are met:
n You have one or more cameras on the host system, either built-in or connected to a USB
device.
n The virtual machine uses hardware version 11 or later.
n The virtual machine is local to your Mac, rather than hosted on a remote server.
Procedure
1 Select Virtual Machine > Settings.
2 Click Add Device.
3 Select Camera.
4 Click Add.
Ordinarily, the default camera of the host system is added to the virtual machine. You can
select a camera by name. If a named camera is chosen, the camera of your virtual machine is
connected explicitly to that camera. In that case, the camera might not connect if you move
the virtual machine to another host, or if you remove the named camera from the host
system.
Configuring the USB Controller and Connecting USB Devices
You can configure the virtual USB controller to enable USB 3.0/3.1 and 2.0 support. You can also
configure the virtual USB controller to connect USB devices to the virtual machine when such
devices are connected to the Mac while the virtual machine is active. The settings you select can
persist across several VMware products, such as Workstation Pro and VMware Horizon 7.
If you have a Mac that supports connecting USB 3.0/3.1 devices, guest operating systems can
connect to USB 3.0/3.1 devices as USB 3.0/3.1 and connect to USB 2.0 devices as USB 2.0.
However, guests with virtual USB 2.0 hardware have issues when connecting to USB 3.0/3.1
devices. An example of a guest operating system that does not have virtual USB 3.0/3.1
hardware is Windows XP. Depending on the specific device, performance might be slow or
partial, or the device might fail to connect.
Using VMware Fusion
VMware, Inc. 156