for my experience. virtual box is a cute foray into virtualization but
i run into a few things. I rathe rlike xeon if i have harware set
aside and its allot more compatible than ESXi is. but for a VM on Os
combination vmware is still the most compatible in the market and they
have been doing it the longest, additionally they have the most robust
virtual switching avialble that i have seen.
I have a xenserver running at home and like it, i have vmware and
xenserver running in production at work (in addition to hyperV ugh)
and i have worked with virtual box as well.
and xenserver/vmware are the winners in my book.
On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 5:48 PM, Trent Shipley <
tshipley@deru.com> wrote:
> (SOT: somewhat off topic)
>
>
> I want to set up a Windows lab computer. I want to work with XP, Vista,
> and Win7. On an MS list it was suggested that I use virtualization
> rather than multiboot.
>
>
> I'm thinking I'd run a Linux distro natively, run FOSS virtualization
> software on Linux, and run the three MS OSes as guests.
>
>
> What is a good Linux distro? Will I need a server distribution or can I
> run a desktop distribution?
>
>
> What are FOSS choices for the virtualization software?
>
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--
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rolling over and going back to sleep after you hit the snooze button.
Stephen
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