Vmware Workstation Pro 17 ✯

You are a casual user running Linux on Windows occasionally, or you’re on an M-series Mac. Also, skip if you refuse to deal with Broadcom’s awkward licensing portal.

Since Broadcom acquired VMware, the website, downloads, and licensing are a mess. Finding the actual installer is a maze. Customer support response times for non-enterprise users have reportedly degraded. VMware Workstation Pro 17

This is the headline feature. Pro 17 now ships with a virtual Trusted Platform Module (TPM) 2.0 by default. Why does that matter? It allows you to run Windows 11 as a guest without any registry hacks or workarounds. For IT admins testing Windows 11 deployments, this is a lifesaver. You are a casual user running Linux on

Drag-and-drop files, shared folders, and unified clipboard (copy/paste text/images) work flawlessly. USB passthrough for devices like YubiKeys or flash drives is reliable. The Annoyances (The Cons) 1. The Pricing Model At $199 for a commercial license (free for personal use? No longer. Broadcom’s acquisition of VMware has complicated things). As of 2024/2025, the free "Player" is very limited, and Pro requires a paid subscription. For hobbyists, VirtualBox (free) is tempting, but you lose performance. Finding the actual installer is a maze

Workstation Pro 17 introduces OpenGL 4.3 and DirectX 11 support in the guest. If you run CAD software, medium-tier gaming, or GPU-accelerated data science inside a VM, the graphics rendering is noticeably smoother than in v16.

While great under load, the VMware services (vmware-authd, vmware-usbarbitrator) consume 300-500MB of RAM even when no VMs are running . On a laptop with 8GB of RAM, this hurts.