On Tuesday 15 September 2009, David Suna wrote:
I just bought a new Gateway laptop that comes with Windows Vista (and a
free upgrade to Windows 7). I want to be able to run both Linux (Ubuntu
is my preferred distribution) and Windows (Vista for now, Windows 7 in
the future) using
I have a linux linux installed and have a vmware guest as windows. I
managed to run wifi sound this way.
what is the purpose of your laptop ?
On Tue, 2009-09-15 at 08:53 +0300, David Suna wrote:
I just bought a new Gateway laptop that comes with Windows Vista (and a
free upgrade to Windows
On Tuesday 15 September 2009 08:53:23 David Suna wrote:
I just bought a new Gateway laptop that comes with Windows Vista (and a
free upgrade to Windows 7). I want to be able to run both Linux (Ubuntu
is my preferred distribution) and Windows (Vista for now, Windows 7 in
the future) using
Hi everyone,
I see its not yet fixed. Who is actually responsible for the site / domain ?
Cheers,
Miki
--
Michael Ben-Nes - Internet Consultant and Director.
http://www.epoch.co.il - weaving the Net.
Cellular: 054-4848113
If your primary OS is the Linux one, then I recommend installing it as a
host and use VirtualBox ( basically because its so easy to use )
If you intend to play 3D games on win7 then note that it wont work on a
vitalized OS. In my case I just created a separated portion just for win7 /
games.
As
2009/9/15 Michael Ben-Nes mich...@epoch.co.il:
If your primary OS is the Linux one, then I recommend installing it as a
host and use VirtualBox ( basically because its so easy to use )
I used VirtualBox on Ubuntu 32 bit to install Windows XP, just to try
to see if Skype 4 for windows will work
Hi,
Here's another vote for VirtualBox. Using it in both Windows host / Linux
guest, Linux(64bit) / Linux(32bit) and Linux / Windows. Integration with
host is excellent. Support is also quick responsive.
You might want to make sure your laptop has a healthy amount of RAM,
regardless of the
On Tuesday 15 September 2009, David Suna wrote:
I just bought a new Gateway laptop that comes with Windows Vista (and a
free upgrade to Windows 7). I want to be able to run both Linux (Ubuntu
is my preferred distribution) and Windows (Vista for now, Windows 7 in
the future) using
4GB should be enough. Right?
David Suna
da...@davidsconsultants.com
ronys wrote:
Hi,
Here's another vote for VirtualBox. Using it in both Windows host / Linux
guest, Linux(64bit) / Linux(32bit) and Linux / Windows. Integration with
host is excellent. Support is also quick responsive.
Hi,
If you're going to run no more than one or two VMs simultaneously, the 4GB
should be fine.
Rony
-Original Message-
From: David Suna [mailto:da...@davidsconsultants.com]
Sent: Tuesday, September 15, 2009 1:27 PM
To: ro...@acm.org
Cc: 'linux-il'
Subject: Re: RE: Virtualization
For me it works well with:
Ubuntu host + winXP 1GB guest + win7 1.5GB guest ( at the same time ).
--
Michael Ben-Nes - Internet Consultant and Director.
http://www.epoch.co.il - weaving the Net.
Cellular: 054-4848113
you need to have the virtualbox-bin to have support for usb.
On Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 12:52 PM, Amos Shapira amos.shap...@gmail.comwrote:
2009/9/15 Michael Ben-Nes mich...@epoch.co.il:
If your primary OS is the Linux one, then I recommend installing it as a
host and use VirtualBox (
Hi,
Depends.
Both Ubuntu and RedHat push KVM as the virtualization solution. IMHO it is
the fastest from the three. It is also most open one.
The free version of VirtualBox has no USB support but has excellent 3D
support, so it is ideal for games.
VMWare is ok, but I don't like it's integration
I'm using VMPlayer with Ubuntu running windows in a virtual machine and I
didn't need to do anything special to get audio running
I also like it very much that you can resize on the fly the virtual client,
very useful if you need to connect your server to an external beamer for
presentations etc.
2009/9/16 sara fink sara.f...@gmail.com:
you need to have the virtualbox-bin to have support for usb.
Where do you get it? I see only virtualbox-ose on Ubuntu 9.04, which is 2.1.4.
On virtualbox.org there are later version 3.0.6 but nothing mentions
virtualbox-bin.
--Amos
2009/9/16 Arie Skliarouk sklia...@gmail.com:
Hi,
Depends.
Both Ubuntu and RedHat push KVM as the virtualization solution. IMHO it is
the fastest from the three. It is also most open one.
Yes. We use xen heavily on CentOS 5 at work and am pretty excited that
RH 5.4 is out with KVM preview
Try here:http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Linux_Downloads
--
Michael Ben-Nes - Internet Consultant and Director.
http://www.epoch.co.il - weaving the Net.
Cellular: 054-4848113
--
On Wed, Sep 16, 2009
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