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PS: If you need very good performance out of the vm, then partition magic would be better. -----Original Message----- From: midrange-l-admin@midrange.com [mailto:midrange-l-admin@midrange.com]On Behalf Of Bob Crothers Sent: Sunday, May 12, 2002 3:00 PM To: midrange-l@midrange.com Subject: RE: multiple os on single pc. was When is a Windows network not a Windows network Because with partition magic, you must reboot. With VMWare, you run the guest OS in a window of your main OS. You need a fair chunk of memory to get acceptable performance, but there is no booting. My desktop os is Win2K. Say a customer calls and says "When I use your software under Win95, something bad happens". Well, I just start VMWare, load the Win95 virutual machine and try it out. WITHOUT EVER REBOOTING. It really is pretty slick. You even see the BIOS boot when you load a vm. They have a free trial download. Check it out. As soon as you see it run, the light will click on with "now I see what Bob was trying to say!". Also, Visual Studio 6.0 will coexist with Visual Studio .NET. Check out http://www.codeproject.com/script/comments/forums.asp and you can find some threads about this. Bob -----Original Message----- From: midrange-l-admin@midrange.com [mailto:midrange-l-admin@midrange.com]On Behalf Of Steve Richter Sent: Sunday, May 12, 2002 2:29 PM To: midrange-l@midrange.com Subject: multiple os on single pc. was When is a Windows network not a Windows network -----Original Message----- From: midrange-l-admin@midrange.com [mailto:midrange-l-admin@midrange.com]On Behalf Of Bob Crothers >Check out www.vmware.com . It allows you to run another OS from WITHIN your >main OS. The main (Host) OS must be WinNT, Win2K or Linux. The guest OS >can be pretty much anything that runs on Intel including all flavors of >windows, linux, BeOS, etc. Bob, How is this different, better then partition magic ? I am setting up my pc soon to have 3 partions. 1. w2k with visual studio 6.0 2. w2k with visual studio .NET 3. Linux. Maybe a 4th with w98 to support legacy code. Thanks, Steve Richter _______________________________________________ This is the Midrange Systems Technical Discussion (MIDRANGE-L) mailing list To post a message email: MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/cgi-bin/listinfo/midrange-l or email: MIDRANGE-L-request@midrange.com Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/midrange-l. _______________________________________________ This is the Midrange Systems Technical Discussion (MIDRANGE-L) mailing list To post a message email: MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/cgi-bin/listinfo/midrange-l or email: MIDRANGE-L-request@midrange.com Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/midrange-l.
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