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I have two general cases of use for my desktop:
1) Surf the web and check email. For which a Linux desktop would work perfectly well.
2) Play games. For which I need Windows. And no, I will not spend weeks of my life faffing with WINE or somesuch. Just no.
What would be awesome would be to use some kind of virtualisation to have both operating systems loaded at the same time, and only switch into the one which has antivirus software and all sorts of additional crud installed when I needed to. Not rebooting between them, as this would be clunky and take significant chunks of time, but something more instant.
However, so far as I understand, doing so would be tricky, as things like 3D graphics don't run well from inside a virtualised OS. And so if I was doing that I'd lose the ability to do the thing I find Windows useful for.
Is this actually the case, oh well-educated friends list and passing people? Or is it something I could set up fairly easily?
1) Surf the web and check email. For which a Linux desktop would work perfectly well.
2) Play games. For which I need Windows. And no, I will not spend weeks of my life faffing with WINE or somesuch. Just no.
What would be awesome would be to use some kind of virtualisation to have both operating systems loaded at the same time, and only switch into the one which has antivirus software and all sorts of additional crud installed when I needed to. Not rebooting between them, as this would be clunky and take significant chunks of time, but something more instant.
However, so far as I understand, doing so would be tricky, as things like 3D graphics don't run well from inside a virtualised OS. And so if I was doing that I'd lose the ability to do the thing I find Windows useful for.
Is this actually the case, oh well-educated friends list and passing people? Or is it something I could set up fairly easily?
no subject
Date: 2012-04-19 08:03 pm (UTC)If I'm running Windows already, then the VM inside of it will keep getting interrupted by the base OS doing Odd Things, I assume, which would defeat the purpose. What I really want is a base virtualisation host that runs both Windows and Linux inside of it, and allows me to say "Put Windows on Hold so that I don't have to worry about it suddenly deciding to churn the hard disk like crazy for some random reason." and go do email/web stuff in the other OS.
no subject
Date: 2012-04-19 08:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-19 08:09 pm (UTC)Except I don't know of any virtual machine controller like that that can run Skyrim properly, and you'd need a THIRD machine to connect to your VMs anyway.
Thought: Clean windows machine, runs nothing except hardware-capable VMs. One of those is Windows (a dirty Windows desktop VM on a Windows VM-host machine) and one is Linux.
no subject
Date: 2012-04-19 08:14 pm (UTC)I take it I'd need separate partitions for each one of those operating systems? Or can the virtual installs just have fake hard drives on the actual one?
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Date: 2012-04-19 09:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-19 10:27 pm (UTC)At home I only have an Unbongo VM running in a VMWare player, mostly for the purposes of poking malware sites with a stick. I'd likely have a set more VMs running, but the CPUs I have are just slightly too old to support HW virtualisation, which means running hackintosh images is out, and I only have the one screen at home - I've got used to being able to give each VM its own screen, which makes a chap much more productive.
no subject
Date: 2012-04-20 10:33 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-20 10:34 am (UTC)Looks like I will have some digging to do next time I reinstall!