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dave
20th April 2005, 20:31
Is it possible to run Linux under Windows? I don't have a pile of test computers around me, and I don't want to have a dual boot computer, so it would be nice if this is possible.

Dave

jimmyjames
20th April 2005, 21:33
I guess VMWare (www.vmware.com) is what you are looking for. It's not free, but it's great. But I think they have a free beta version on their web site.

VMWare emulates a virtual PC and lets you install nearly every OS as the guest OS under the host OS.

Jimmy

tagammeer
21st April 2005, 11:42
CoLinux might be another solution:

http://www.colinux.org/

It's free, but not quite as flexible as VMWare, I guess...

jojo
21st April 2005, 11:52
Microsoft Virtual PC is similar to VMWare, I think:
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/virtualpc/default.mspx

jojo

metron
8th July 2008, 22:45
Here you can find another bit of virtality ;)

"..its a family of powerful x86 virtualization product for enterprise as well as home use." (http://www.virtualbox.org/):cool:

rsinha
10th July 2008, 16:21
Although VirtualBox is good, it runs Windows quite slow on my linux box. VMWare Server (freeware) works better. You might want to try both and evaluate the usability differences.

Almost every "Perfect Desktop setup" tutorial on howtoforge has guidance on setting up VMWare server. Pick one of the tutorials for your distribution (Ubuntu, Fedora, openSUSE) and give it a shot.

HTH

metron
11th July 2008, 10:10
...well what for a linux distro you use? i used ubuntu 7.04 and it works fine on a 1,8 GHz Intel PC. It virtualised my winxp pro something slower , ok but i think that not so awful. I try to use my linux boxes and vmware or virtual box images anyway for my USB-Sticks. It should handle some lnx-distro's with a lonesome player and a handful of choices to boot. Like debian server,ubuntu desktop,redhat ...etc.

Did you experience whit that, trying to use virtual images on usb sticks?:confused:

jiggleo
18th September 2008, 08:41
running Linux under Windows would be like buying a Toyota after driving an Audi. with that being said have you considered one of the many flavors that allow you to boot from an external? There's a free version of vmware and a freebie imitator. can't remember what it was called but it might suffice.