Hi Leland,

Gaming may be an exception because I understand some such programs
bypass the OS and API's and go directly to the hardware (I guess that's
what you're talking about), but as a Big General Rule, computer
performance 'degradation' is a function of physical I/O with devices,
usually managed by the OS and device drivers, and from this standpoint
if enough RAM is installed to keep 'x' number of OS's and 'y' number of
applications in memory, there should be little, if any, difference
between a standalone OS machine and a VM machine.


Bill


 
> Yes, that had occurred to me.  A VM is not the best choice on 
> which to 
> run games.  Windows is still ahead of Linux at this point as a gaming 
> OS; although, I haven't seen any benchmark/comparison.  It is my 
> understanding that the windows NVIDIA driver is more mature for SLI, 
> etc, than is the Linux NVIDIA driver, and the windows (OS) will yield 
> more FPS, (eg Frames per Second) and greater SLI functionality under 
> windows than the Linux OS with a NVIDIA driver.
> 
> I would rather host VM(s) under the Linux OS and have all my 
> web stuff 
> under the safer Linux OS, (eg web browser, email clients, 
> etc), and only 
> run applications that are not available under Linux/Unix in a 
> Windows VM 
> guest, but if I were a gamer, I would reverse it and host the guest 
> OS(s) on Windows, so I could run games natively.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> LelandJ



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