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Virtualization on my New Lenovo - Page 2

post #21 of 31
Well I actually NEED to network them for my purposes But thanks for the input.

Seablade
post #22 of 31
Quote:
Originally Posted by DimGR
i have tried every virtual software and the best 2 are vmware and Xen
Hi DimGR! Regarding VMware! I am not able to fully understand one thing.They offer many things, VMware player, server, workstation etc. I want to know which one of these softewares is for home users.
I will be thankful for any help.
Thanks.
post #23 of 31
Workstation is your typical home user, single computer, solution from VMWare.

Player will play any virtual machine created with workstation, so that cana lso be useful, however you cant create new VMs with it.

Seablade
post #24 of 31
Thanks Seablade!
post #25 of 31
Thread Starter 
you can't actually creatire VMs with player, just run pre-made ones (some of which are available for download from VMware's website.
post #26 of 31
VMware DOES provide DirectX acceleration, but it is limited to about DirectX 8 right now. You have to enable it manually... it is considered experimental.
post #27 of 31
I don't guess there is a virtualization program that will let me install OSX on a x86 laptop?
post #28 of 31
Nope. At least not the stock OSX as it requires the TPM chip.

Seablade
post #29 of 31
Thread Starter 
i think it's gonna be a while before you can install OS X on a PC. but if you want OS X, just buy a MAC!
post #30 of 31
within vmware I'm able to assign the virtual machine multi-processor or single processor setting. os x is unix based so just install linux! fedora is pretty =D
post #31 of 31
Nothing like old threads.....

Seablade
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