If your iPad user doesn't have a way to connect over the network, the rest of my answer here won't be of much help. However, you can run Microsoft RDP (among others, but that app is pretty good) and connect over a network to a Windows "machine" running somewhere else. The other answers here assume you're trying to run the virtual machine on the iPad processor itself, and they're right that the power isn't there. Even though there aren’t viable first or third party apps entering 2021 for iPad, it’s not outright discouraged by policy or limited hardware performance and the iPad has a lot of headroom and tooling available should this be a market that needs service. Since the 2018 announcement, VMWare already does virtualization on top of raspberry pie class SOC. Hypervisor are not under some fairly broad restrictions placed on Remote Desktop apps. In the App Store Review guidelines, Apple says it offers limited hypervisor entitlements but no broad prohibition of apps being shipped. Apple’s business model is that their first party hypervisor framework is macOS 10.10+ currently and I expect that to evolve substantially during the transition from Intel to Apple Silicon which coincidentally has always powered the iPad. This is more about app review and licensing / business models and engineering effort and less about technical feasibility IMO. Use native apps or Remote Desktop to a small PC or co-located one is the best current option.Īpple has an explicit hypervisor entitlement listed in the App Store Review guidelines and I disagree with the lack of CPU and kernel support since multiple third party books are written on iOS internals in addition to Apple providing SDK, headers and many developer resources. There are no easy wins for running a windows VM on iOS 14.
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