Can anyone give me a simple comparison of those two? It is hard to get the idea from their web site.

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Unless you need snapshots, Player does what most need - create VMs, run VMs created via Workstation or ESX/etc. Just doesn't give you the tabbed layout, but you can run multiple VMs – OMG Ponies Nov 13 '10 at 2:28
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VM Player runs a virtual instance, but can't create the vm. Workstation allows for the creation and administration of virtual machines. If you have a second machine, you can create the vm on one and run it with the player the other machine. I bought Workstation and I use it setup testing vms that the player runs. Hope this explains it for you.

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VMware Player can create VMs, as of version 3. – Wyzard Nov 22 '10 at 7:18
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A big difference that i notice is that VM workstation allows you to use multiple screens on the virtual machine. vmware player only allows single screen. That is the big difference that i notice at work/home.

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Workstation has some features that Player lacks, such as teams (groups of VMs connected by private LAN segments) and multi-level snapshot trees. It's aimed at power users and developers; they even have some hooks for using a debugger on the host to debug code in the VM (including kernel-level stuff). The core technology is the same, though.

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