Kevin Buettner wrote: > > My experiences have been quite the opposite of yours. I've been running > it for around three years now and have been quite pleased. Recently, I > upgraded to their latest workstation offering. > > > They do not (at least last time I checked) support the advanced kernel > > features. When I upgraded from SuSE 6.1 to 7.1 VMWare upchucked big > > time and has refused to recompile the drivers ever since -- problem > > 64-bit kernel mode not supported. > > How much memory do you have? It's true (according to their web page) > that they don't support PAE mode, but you don't need a kernel with > PAE enabled unless you have more than 4GB of physical memory. Only 512 MB, however the way I set up my disks initially caused multiple configurations coexisting on /boot some headaches installing. It was generally fine with for a single version of the OS, but... I'll try installing it again. > Which version are you looking at? I just took a look at their website > and their most recent workstation product does run Linux as either the > host or the guest. Their low(er) end server product does too. Their > high end server product doesn't run on *either* Windows or Linux. > Instead, they have their own OS. Well, I stand corrected. They do have version 3.0 out for Linux. I wish I could find the page that gave the specifics that left the impression that it did not. My apologies for the misinformation. > As I said earlier, I've been running their workstation product on a > dual processor machine without any difficulties whatsoever. As for > pushing the envelope, I guess it depends upon what you mean by that. > I'm not running PAE mode enabled kernels. Also, the Windows > applications that I run are not graphics intensive. As Bob George > pointed out, if you're into serious Windows gaming, vmware won't be a > good choice. For the original poster's purposes though, it may be the > perfect solution to avoid booting back into Windows to run those Windows > applications which don't yet have good counterparts on Linux. no, I typically do not do gaming. However I do cross platform code development and bought the thing to bounce back and forth and recompile/test, etc. my Qt interfaces... I do however run some modeling programs which only run on Win* and I have some specialized sound stuff which I have found no equivalent yet. The sound on the SMP machine kept bouncing back and forth between the two processors. > Wine (from CodeWeavers) might also be worth a try. I gave it a > try yesterday on one of the applications that I care about and was > surprised to find that it mostly works. On another application > though, the install went okay, but when I tried to run the installed > ap, it seemed to get hung in some sort of tight loop -- top showed > it consuming all of the CPU. Now that I've just upgraded the OS and reconfigured the disk topology I'll take another look to see if I can get it all working. I'll report back on what I find with the current stuff. It would be a god send to get ANYTHING working so that I do not have to play either the reboot or office-chair shuffle... As a note, wine seems to buggy still, and I'll also have a look at win4linux as someone suggested. EBo --