![]() I stuck with the defaults for the most part, other than changing the name of the VM and ensuring it was created on an exteral SSD I house my VM files on. Walking through the VMWare Fusion (I’m using version 11.5) “Add Virtual Machine” wizard takes you through creating the Virtual Machine. I went through the same process using Ubuntu Server 20.04 LTS ISO and the steps are the same. Updated 27th April 2020: A few days after writing this post Ubuntu released 20.04 LTS. You’ll also need the Ubuntu Server 18.04 LTS ISO which can be found on the Ubuntu Server downloads page. ![]() If you need VMWare Fusion you can buy and install it from the VMWare website. I just setup a Ubuntu Server 18.04 LTS Virtual Machine on VMWare Fusion on my Macbook and whilst the basic process was just following the default steps but there was a few other things I needed to change to get things working. Installing Ubuntu 18.04 & 20.04 LTS Server in VMWare Fusion ![]()
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