A few days late...

Here is a comparative review of VMWare Workstation, Virtaul PC and
Bochs:

http://www.osnews.com/story.php?news_id=1054

HTH,

Martin Polley
Technical Communicator
http://www.surf-com.com/
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Tel: (+972) (4) 9095-732
Mobile: (053) 864-280
ICQ 15617901




-----Original Message-----
From: guy keren [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Tuesday, October 01, 2002 8:28 PM
To: Omer Zak
Cc: linux ILUG
Subject: Re: Options (Re: VMware and competing products)



On Tue, 1 Oct 2002, Omer Zak wrote:

> According to a brief Web surfing session, the options are: Bochs - a 
> Free emulator - not suitable for my needs, because it is
>         emulator and not virtualizer (i.e. very slow).
> plex86 - a Free virtualizer - suitable for people, who want to develop
it
>         rather than use it as a reliable tool for their own work.
>         For me to use it, would be like using a 2.5.* kernel for my
>         regular development work.
> VMware - Workstation 3.2 costs $299 per license, and 30-day free
>         evaluation is available.  Some people recommend it.
>         Can use Linux based host.
> VirtualPC (http://www.connectix.com) - Virtual PC5 for Windows costs
$229,
>         There is no information about a version running under Linux
host,
>         but I sent them an E-mail message asking about this.

use vmware, and forget about anything else. for 300$, you get something 
that works, that gets further developed, that works quite well, and with
a 
near-current CPU will work fast enough for your needs (any p-III 700Mhz
or 
above would make it almost invisible).

the support for 'undo' of file system changes is valuable with software 
that might corrupt the system, as well as with testing installation 
scripts. saving on those 300$ is a simple waste of time, and other 
products don't tend to come near what VMWare does.

at my former workplace, VMWare was used to test installatin procedures -

they had several operating system copies with it, and it saved a lot of 
time for developers.

btw, just to add to the confusion, you always have the option of using 
norton ghost to save a copy of partitions, and install and delete them 
when needed - it takes about 5 minutes to recover a typical windows 2000

installation (10 minutes if done over a network). but this is quite 
inferior relative to the time it takes booting an OS under VMWare.

-- 
guy

"For world domination - press 1,
 or dial 0, and please hold, for the creator." -- nob o. dy


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