Ubuntu and Windows
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TNCaver wrote:
The few times I've tried this I couldn't reliably or consistently get more than an 800x600 screen res
Did you install the guest additions (for VirtualBox) or VMWare Tools (for VMWare)? You need to install those to get cool functionality like mouse capture and auto-resize of the desktop.
Mike Poz
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No, as I wrote, I was using Win7 Virtual PC so that I'd only have one VM engine installed.
If you think 'goto' is evil, try writing an Assembly program without JMP.
Your first sentence in your first comment says this: "The few times I've tried this I couldn't reliably or consistently get more than an 800x600 screen res. I managed to get a higher res once, but I couldn't get it to come back on reboot of the VM. " I didn't realize you hijacked the thread to be an XP Mode on Virtual PC specific question. I thought you were trying to do what the original thread writer is asking about (using a virtual system for Linux/Windows and which to make the host/guest). That said: I gave up on Virtual PC a long time ago as, while it does have tight integration for XP mode support, it's darned near useless for anything else.
Mike Poz
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Your first sentence in your first comment says this: "The few times I've tried this I couldn't reliably or consistently get more than an 800x600 screen res. I managed to get a higher res once, but I couldn't get it to come back on reboot of the VM. " I didn't realize you hijacked the thread to be an XP Mode on Virtual PC specific question. I thought you were trying to do what the original thread writer is asking about (using a virtual system for Linux/Windows and which to make the host/guest). That said: I gave up on Virtual PC a long time ago as, while it does have tight integration for XP mode support, it's darned near useless for anything else.
Mike Poz
I didn't hijack the thread, my reply had nothing to do with XP mode except as the reason to get Ubunto to work in Win7 Virtual PC rather than another VM. I was talking about running Ubuntu on Win7 in a VM in a reply to someone else on the thread who said he was doing that. But yes, I'm coming to the same conclusion about the limited usefullness of Virtual PC.
If you think 'goto' is evil, try writing an Assembly program without JMP.
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ubuntu os, windows xp virtual box vm <--- been using it for years without reinstall and no crash
01101111 01100010 01101010 01100101 01100011 01110100 01110011 00100000 01101001 01101110 00100000 01101101 01101001 01110010 01110010 01101111 01110010 00100000 01100001 01110010 01100101 00100000 01100011 01101100 01101111 01110011 01100101 01110010 00100000 01110100 01101000 01100001 01101110 00100000 01110100 01101000 01100101 01111001 00100000 01100001 01110000 01110000 01100101 01100001 01110010
Same configuration, works like a charm.
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Virtualbox is good. Lately I got a few 32 gig Sandisk thumb drives for $18, and installed Ubuntu 386 with Gnome on that and 64bit. Seems to run faster then Virtual machines and is persistent as opposed to LiveDVD's. Also, I can take it with me and boot any computer hardware to Linux that has USB boot option enabled..computer on a stick. Windows can then be still installed by default, and the running Linux easily accesses the native drive. Also, you can boot the linux..even if the native hard drive goes on you. I like windows 7 and C# alot, I also like Linux with Gnome and C# ALOT.
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The few times I've tried this I couldn't reliably or consistently get more than an 800x600 screen res. I managed to get a higher res once, but I couldn't get it to come back on reboot of the VM. Is there a publicly available pre-fab'd Ubuntu (or Redhat) VM for Windows 7 Virtual PC with higher screen resolutions? Or did you use a different VM engine, like VirtualBox or VMWare? I'd prefer to install and run only one VM manager, and let that be the one needed to run XP mode.
If you think 'goto' is evil, try writing an Assembly program without JMP.
I use VirtualBox on a Windows 7 machine. I have Linux Mint 12 (Ubuntu derivative) as one (using different desktop - XFCE is close to Ubuntu 10.04/10.10), Ubuntu 10.04, Ubuntu 12.04 (Unity, which I do not like), ZorinOS Core 5.2 (provides Gnome 2 desktop (even though Ubuntu 11.04 based) and also XP and Windows 7 GUI look and feel and, finally, ReactOS (an XP freeware version). I know my browsers run faster on these OSes running in a VM than they do native on Windows 7 - I use Firefox, Google Chrome and Opera. The occasional glitch I get is when switching OSes under VirtualBox, it seems to lose it being plugged in. Not sure if it is a Windows 7 problem or VirtualBox. I do know that Windows 7 does not always play nice with my non-MS browsers. I did try to install the first two versions (Developer and Consumer Preview) of Windows 8 and could not get through the install process in spite of allocating sufficient RAM and virtual HD space for the virtual machines. I have not tried the latest Win. 8 Release Preview yet. If the USB flash drive continues to be a problem, I might try VMWare.
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I went to the Hiren BootCD website, but there is no download link for the CD. Do you know where to get it from?
The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.
You need to go to the bottom of the page. It is a ZIP file. See: http://www.hirensbootcd.org/download/ - (www.hirensbootcd.org/download). You should see: Filename: Hirens.BootCD.15.1.zip Filesize: 498.36 MB (522565534 bytes) ISO MD5: B5DE7A10DD1586D47535372EA1AD9BED ZIP MD5: 5B8E9240AE8CF74939B60AD872CBBABA It contains the ISO and other files.
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Hmm. I have heard all different opinions here, and I have several machines available that I could use. That seems like it may be the best option. Also, by safer all I meant was that viruses are less of a concern due to Windows being the target of most. I will probably stick with Windows 7 on my desktop for normal operations and Ubuntu on my laptop or a VM. The server environment I'm developing is entirely self contained, and I have several remote cloud servers I can test it on, so the scariness of a VM for me isn't as big of a factor. At the same time, I just plane like Ubuntu. There isn't a perfect solution I don't think. The bottom line is this for me: Ubuntu, although it should be (IMO), isn't as popular or mainstream as Windows, and is doesn't run everything Windows can. I find myself rebooting several times in a day due to different things (I have two projects currently, one using .Net/C++ and one for Linux).
Collin Biedenkapp
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Hi there guys, This is a question I have been dying to ask. I currently dual boot Ubuntu and Windows, but rebooting is a pain. So, my question is this: Of those of you that have used Windows (or use it still), if you've used Ubuntu, which did you like better and why? I am trying to decide if it is time to install Windows in a VBox from Ubuntu or vice-versa. I need a Linux environment regardless as I am developing a Linux server-side application. I like Ubuntu, and it is faster and safer than Windows, but it is less polished in some ways (IMO) than Windows. I have used Windows 8 and it seems that there are some drastic, less than idea (again, IMO) changes coming along. I am preparing to have to line myself up with another OS. Opinions everyone?
Collin Biedenkapp
I'm always opening command lines in Ubuntu and the gui is just there to hold a bunch of terminals. So I go Windows holding a Ubuntu VM. But then I use Windows more in my daily routine so that might be leaning me that way.
_____________________________ A logician deducts the truth. A detective inducts the truth. A journalist abducts the truth. Give a man a mug, he drinks for a day. Teach a man to mug...
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I didn't hijack the thread, my reply had nothing to do with XP mode except as the reason to get Ubunto to work in Win7 Virtual PC rather than another VM. I was talking about running Ubuntu on Win7 in a VM in a reply to someone else on the thread who said he was doing that. But yes, I'm coming to the same conclusion about the limited usefullness of Virtual PC.
If you think 'goto' is evil, try writing an Assembly program without JMP.
I use VMWare Player to run Linux Mint under Windows, then use sftp and ssh to connect to our network. Once you install the VMWare Tools (after setting up the linux machine re-sizing is no problem. I also imported XP Mode into VMWare Play and got that working as a VM. Again you have to install the VMW Tools after setting the XP VM. You need to download the VMWare converter and install as client-server.