You might give Xen a try.  You can download the live CD 
using the link below.  I'm downloading the Xen live CD 
myself, to see how it might help me.

http://wiki.xensource.com/xenwiki/LiveCD

Regards,

LelandJ


On 01/29/2010 10:00 AM, Bill Arnold wrote:
>
> Paul,
>
>>> I'd favor the VM approach. I think we're all going to wind
>> up running VM
>>> anyway.
>>>
>>> No, I'm not using it yet. I'm still reeling from the fact
>> that it requires a
>>> host OS. Cheap way out, and I think it makes the machine
>> vulnerable to
>>> attack. But I suspect a better VM will come along at some
>> point. I know
>>> IBM's VM is exactly what we'd like to have (it doesn't
>> require a host).
>>
>> You could set up a Linux box to boot right into a VM running
>> DOS or Windows 3.1. From
>> the user's POV, it would be totally native.
>
>
> That's good to know. What I'm really wishing for is a "real" VM where it's
> the OS, has no dependencies, and can run any of the major guest OS's.
>
> Besides using it for testing apps with different releases, my expectation is
> that it would provide complete protection for the OS from attacks, because
> virtual OS's disappear and (presumably) VM itself can't be touched.
>
> It's probably being developed somewhere. Intel?
>
>
> Bill
>
>>
>> Paul
>>
>>
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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