There are a few different virtualization packages available for Linux. These include VMWare, VirtualBox, and Parallels. VirtualBox is free, whereas Parallels and VMWare cost money. VirtualBox is also provided by most distro's repositories, so it is the easiest solution to set up.
After you have installed VirtualBox, click "New Machine" or "New", depending on what version you have. Name your machine something appropriate, like "Windows XP." On the next page, specify the amount of RAM. Windows XP will need at least 64 MB, but 256 MB is a more reasonable minimum. Next, create a hard drive. You have two options. One is a dynamically sized image. This image does not occupy as much space on your hard drive immediately, but will expand as you put more stuff on Windows XP. It is also slightly slower. The other option is to create a fixed-size image, which will perform better, but also occupy more space on your hard drive, even if you don't need it.
Now that you have given the machine a name, RAM, and a hard drive, it will ALMOST be done. By default, it does not enable sound or USB (if you have the OSE version, there is no USB). It also will attempt to boot from the empty hard drive . Click the options on the right side of VirtualBox to enable a sound card, and to "insert" a CD. You can choose either an ISO image or your actual CD-ROM drive to boot from. Once you have done this, start the machine. You should see Windows XP setu begin. Continue the installation, just as you would on a real computer.
Once Windows XP is installed, go to Devices > Install Guest Additions on the box that you are running XP in. This will "insert" a CD that provides extra drivers, and allows you to move your mouse and copy-paste between Linux and XP.
Windows or Linux. Its a users option for this. Linux is free but Windows is more popular.
No. Windows and Linux have different APIs and ABIs for programs to access. You cannot run Linux binaries on Windows, and you can only run Windows binaries on Linux if you have Wine installed.
The kernel in Unix-based operating systems like Linux is called the "Linux kernel." In Windows Vista, the kernel is known as the "Windows NT kernel." Each kernel serves as the core component of the operating system, managing system resources, providing essential services, and facilitating communication between software and hardware components.
it is called an operating system(OS) like windows, Linux , mac
Windows, Solaris, Linux, & Apple OSX...
Yes, CA-dBFast works under Linux Wine program, Although, it would be better under a Virtual Machine running Windows.
Preemptive (both Windows and Linux).
There is plenty of software which allows Linux to work with NTFS file system. For windows there is not as much. But I think Acronis "Backup and Recovery" allows you to read Linux file systems under windows.
There are no wild computer viruses that affect Linux. Oh wait, there was RST.b. If you need to, you can run certain windows viruses under Linux with wine.
Yes and no. Linux will not run Windows applications by itself, however, there are ample tools written for Linux that permit you to run Windows applications on Linux. The open-source WINE software will run a majority of Windows software on Linux. You can even configure Linux to automatically recognize Windows applications and use WINE to run them. Alternatively, there's a wide variety of virtual machine products that permit you to run the Windows operating system as an application under Linux, and, in turn, any Windows applications inside the Windows virtual environment. Finally, some "Windows applications" are written in .Net or Java and can be run directly under Linux using mono and java respectively (albeit, some .Net applications will not yet run under mono).
Two operating systems are; Windows, and Linux.
Linux is considered to be more secure than Windows.
Vista Home Premium : Not Linux! Get linux! Vista Business : Not Linux! Get linux!
There is no such thing as "Windows Linux." Linux is not a version of Windows and has nothing at all to do with Windows. They are two totally completely different operating systems made by completely different people.
Windows is better for desktop computers. Linux is better for servers.
Yes, as long as they are given permission under the fstab.
The 2 operating systems are different from each other. Linux programs aren't meant to work in Windows most of the time. If you want to run Linux programs in Windows, install cygwin, and compile them from source code.