Behind TG Pro: An Interview with Matt Austin, Founder of Tunabelly
Matt shares his insights into the challenges and rewards of developing tools for Apple's ever-evolving ecosystem.

There’s a moment many of us hit after getting a new Mac.
Everything feels fast. Effortless. Clean.
Apps open instantly. Files move without friction. Even small tasks feel… lighter.
And then, almost inevitably, something breaks the flow.
It’s usually small. Almost forgettable.
“This app only runs on Windows.”
Maybe it’s a client tool. A finance app. A system your team still depends on.
You try to find alternatives. You consider workarounds.
And for a second, it feels like you’ve traded one limitation for another.
For years, that was the deal with switching to Mac.
But with M5 Macs, something has quietly changed.
We’ve all seen the headlines: faster chips, better performance, longer battery life.
From M1 to M5, each generation pushed things forward. But most of that conversation stayed focused on macOS performance.
What’s easy to miss is the second-order effect:
Macs are no longer just fast at running macOS—they’re powerful enough to run another operating system without feeling like a compromise.
Not long ago, running Windows on a Mac felt like stretching the machine beyond its comfort zone.
Now, it feels… expected.
The question isn’t:
“Can a Mac run Windows?”
It’s:
“How seamlessly can it do it?”
Performance numbers are easy to talk about.
But what matters is how that speed shows up in real workflows.
Large Excel files. Internal dashboards. Enterprise tools that were never built for macOS.
Before, running these in a virtual machine felt like a risk. Now, they behave like normal apps.
If you’ve ever needed a Windows environment just to test something—or run a specific tool—you know the friction.
With M5 Macs, that friction fades. Windows becomes something you can spin up, use, and move on from—without breaking your flow.
This is the real one. You’ve switched to Mac. You like it. You want to stay. But there’s that one app you can’t replace. And it lingers in the background of your workflow.
What M5 changes is simple:
That gap no longer has to define your setup.
At this point, the limitation isn’t performance.
It’s how you set it up.
There are a few ways to run Windows on a Mac today—but most people aren’t looking for complexity. They want something reliable, something that works without constant tweaking.
That’s where Parallels Desktop comes in.

There are alternatives like UTM or CrossOver, but they often require more effort—or only work well for specific use cases.
For most users, Parallels is the point where things stop feeling technical and start feeling natural.
Dig deeper: read our full Parallels Desktop review here.
This is where the experience really clicks.
M5 performance removes the usual friction:
And Parallels bridges the gap between systems:
At a certain point, you stop thinking about “running Windows on a Mac.”
You’re just using the apps you need—without worrying about where they come from.
That’s the shift.
Not everyone does.
But for some users, this setup changes everything:
If you’ve ever paused your workflow because of compatibility issues, you already know how valuable this can be.
M5 Macs didn’t just make Macs faster.
They quietly removed one of the biggest barriers in computing:
the need to choose between operating systems.
With the right setup, your Mac becomes something more flexible—something that adapts to your workflow, instead of the other way around.
And virtual machine software tools like Parallels Desktop are what make that possible.
The real upgrade isn’t just performance.
It’s freedom.
If you’ve been thinking about trying this setup, this is a good moment:
Sometimes the biggest upgrade isn’t a new app.
It’s realizing what your Mac can already do.
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