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Deluxe 19.09.2005        |
Microsoft Virtual PC 2004 Deluxe Author Company: Microsoft Software Category:
Microsoft Virtual PC 2004 Deluxe 5 stars (I can't believe I haven't tried this before) - I've been using ... File Size: 109.99 kB OS: Windows 98 / NT / 2000 / ME / XP / VISTA License: CD-ROM - Time Limit, free to try, 109.99 to buy. Software Developed by Microsoft Software Download now (109.99 kB) Click to buy with discount via Amazon (109.99$) Description : Microsoft Virtual PC 2004 - 5 stars (I can't believe I haven't tried thi Microsoft Virtual PC 2004 review:5 stars (I can't believe I haven't tried this before) - I've been using computers for 25 years, so I'm a bit jaded and not easily wowed. However, using Virtual PC 2004 has wowed me. I've stayed away from this kind of software in the past because I worried that it would run very slowly. I was wrong. I have now created two virtual machines, one Windows XP Pro and one Linux distro (PCLinuxOS) and I couldn't be happier. Not only can I run other operating systems without rebooting, but they run nearly as fast as normal. Even better, I can close them into a kind of hibernate mode so that the next time I start them up they are right where I was before. I have also set up the undo disk feature. With that, if I screw something up I can just decide to not save any changes to the virtual machine. So, if I get a virus it doesn't do any damage. If a software install trashes the system it doesn't do any real damage. Finally, I can access my host PC from the virtual PC to exchange files just as I would on a normal network. I highly recommend this software. Get the 45-day trial version first, and then I'll bet you buy a copy just like I did.5 stars (I am loving it!) - Yesterday evening I downloaded the virtual pc 45 day trial from microsoft to try out on my tablet pc. Within an hour, using only my net connection (no floppy, no cdrom) I had a running Debian Linux system. This really rocks!
I have already placed an order for the licensed package here on Amazon.
4 stars (Using Minix on Virtual PC for Windows free demo version) - My interest in Virtual PC is for experimenting with the Minix operating system without repartitioning the hard disk. Minix is meant for educational use, and university lab PCs are not always available for dedicated use. I downloaded the free VPC for Windows demo. I found VPC easy to install on a Windows 2000 system. However, the link to Microsoft support on the startup page did not work for me.
Installing Minix on a VPC virtual disk was another matter. The standard Minix installation method, which is to boot a Minix floppy disk into a RAM disk, fails. Others have reported similar failures with VPC for Mac as well as VPC for Windows.
Minix can be started in "DOSMinix" mode, which uses a FAT file system as a simulated disk, and another Minix user has provided a ready-to-run DOSMinix-on-FreeDOS VPC image file, which I found works OK. Minix worked well as far as I tested it. I found that I could set rootdev=ram in the boot monitor and run with the root on a RAMdisk, even though people who have tried to do a conventional installation of Minix onto a Virtual PC virtual disk have seen messages about inability to open the RAMdisk. I created a second virtual hard disk and was unable to format it with FreeDOS, but Minix was able to partition it and create file systems on the partitions, so this may be a route to making a true native Minix installation on Virtual PC. I recompiled the Minix system in a time that seemed normal for the PII-266 system I was using. I haven't checked out the floppy disk or CD-ROM interfaces yet, and I don't expect networking will work, since there is no Minix driver for the emulated DEC 21140 ethernet interface that Virtual PC presents to guest systems.
Problems: I had some problems with the keyboard interface while using Minix on FreeDOS on Virtual PC. Occasionally there would be long periods when Minix would not respond to keypresses, alternating with periods in which Minix acted as if the keys were bouncing, with multiple characters echoed for a single keypress. Caveat: my test system for the above installation was a 266 Mhz Pentium II, and Microsoft specifies a 400 Mhz system as a requirement for Virtual PC, so the problems I observed may not be seen on a faster system.
Comparison with alternatives: Minix does not have a graphical user interface, it's a command line system, and it works well even on old slow PCs with limited resources. So even though the Bochs emulator is much slower than either Virtual PC or VMWare, Minix on Bochs works well enough on any Pentium-class system, and of course Bochs is free and available for multiple platforms. Minix on FreeDOS on Virtual PC is about as fast as Minix on VMWare, and is definitely a less expensive alternative than VMWare. Also, my sense is that VMWare's target market is not the home or educational user, it is the business or ISP that wants to run heavy-duty servers as virtual machines. So I would expect support for the kind of use that interests me might be better from Microsoft than from VMWare. Of course this is conjecture, I haven't asked for support from either Microsoft or VMWare.
Additional support for Minix in any virtual or emulated environment is likely to come from users, so a web search for Minix + Virtual PC may yield useful hints. The same would, of course, apply with VMWare or Bochs.
Bottom line: VPC looks useful enough for my somewhat specialized purpose that I will probably buy a copy when the free trial expires. This is the CD-ROM version. The full version can be purchased by clicking on the "Buy Now" button below for around $109.99 USD. Click to buy with discount via Amazon      |