Am Freitag 27 Juli 2007 22:40 schrieb Joshua Doll: > A. R. wrote: > > On 7/27/07, Florian Philipp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> Hi! > >> > >> I need a way to use Napster or iTunes on Linux. (I don't like DRM but > >> it's not my PC and not my decision) > >> > >> I think my best bet would be a virtual machine with Windows 2000 (I can > >> spare the licence). The PC is an older AMD64 without AMD-V. Therefore I > >> need something that > >> > >> a) is free or at least not expensive > >> b) works without AMD-V and Intel-V > >> c) works with Win2k > >> d) simulates a CD recorder for burning the music (or do you know a > >> better way to get rid of DRM again?) > >> > >> I hope my English was good enough to explain myself and you can help me. > >> > >> Thanks in advance! > >> > >> Florian Philipp > > > > The only thing I can think of is "wine" (an emulator), which is in the > > portage tree: > > > > emerge -va wine > > > > After that, there is a very good site for using wine with several > > programs: http://frankscorner.org/ > > > > I know nothing on how to avoid all that DRM fiasco. > > > > HTH > > > > - AR > > There's vmare, kvm, qemu?, and xen that I can think of right off the top > of my head. Wine might work but I wouldn't bet on it. > > > --Joshua Doll
KVM needs Intel-V or AMD-V. Xen doesn't need it for Linux and BSD but needs it for Windows. Qemu and vmware might work but I just don't know if they can emulate a cd recorder and that's what I need to know. Wine does not work (iTunes doesn't start, Napster can't playback and is barely tested, Windows Media Player is tricky at best - everything according to appdb.winehq.org). Even if it would start, I don't think Wine supports the DRM framework of Win.
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