It's reassuring to see that people have given the thumbs-up to my solution.  
Confirms for me that my line of thought is sound.

THANKS EVERYONE for your input!  :-)



On 04/19/2016 03:58 PM, Brian Cluff wrote:
I'm a big fan of running a hybid environment exactly the way you describe.  It 
lets you have you cake and eat it too, and will work
for 95% of everyone out there.

Additionally to what you described I would, at minimum, setup his home 
directory as a shared directory onto the Linux side of the
setup, then once you have everything on the windows side setup exactly the way 
you like it take a snapshot of the way things are and
have him run off the snapshot.

THAT is exactly what I had planned since it gives him a way to get files to and 
fro both systems.

 Then when things get really nasty you can discard the infected snapshot and 
then immediatly take a
new snapshot of everything in pristine condition, saving you hours of work.

You might also want to consider not setting up a network on the windows VM 
unless it's strictly needed.

VM MUST have network access.

 That will prevent the VM from being used for the everyday tasks

Everyday tasks will ALWAYS include BOTH sides.

when he should be using the Linux part of the computer.  Maybe setup a firewall 
so that the
machine can only go to certain places if the network is used.

Lastly, and most secure, if you can get away with it, you can set the VM's hard 
drive as immutable.

What a COOL idea! My first thought is that I will not be able to because the environment WILL need to change, but I like the thought. I'll devote some braincells to the concept just to make sure. THANKS!

  That setting will take a
snapshot of the VM every time it starts, but on exit the snapshot will be 
thrown away along with any changes/infections.  That will
leave you with a pristine system every single time and the system will stay 
clean and work perfectly forever.

Just so (I) am clear on this:  A VM setup this way cannot get winblows updates 
either... correct?  It would literally be frozen in time.


 This only works if
the software doesn't require regular changes to it's config.  If you would like 
to do this in virtual box, the GUI does not yet
allow you to set a VM drive as immutable, so you will have to use the 
vboxmanage tool to accomplish the setting.

Of course none of this will fly at all unless this person is completely willing 
to deal with the differences and learning curve.
Unless they completely buy into it, I wouldn't waste my time... an answer of "I 
guess I'll try it" or anything wishy washy like that
will just end up with you having to reinstall the machine to windows.  You need an 
answer of something like "I'm willing to do
whatever it takes to make my computer run smoothly all the time."

PS, if one of his pieces of software that he can't live without is quickbooks,

NOPE, no quickbooks or anything else that will choke in the network share 
scenario.

 keep in mind that you can't store it's
config/database on a network share, which is what the shared folders on 
Virtualbox look like like to windows.   For Quickbooks, just
create a second Virtual Hard drive for the system who's only reason for 
existing is to hold the quickbooks database.... just make
sure you don't set it to immutable :)

Brian Cluff

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