Ok what do you think about VirtualBox or VirtualPC which are also free ? Eric Le jeudi 10 mai 2007 à 13:49 -0400, Michael Kohne a écrit : > Look at VMWare. The VMWare server product is free at the moment and > allows you to setup as many VMs as you want. It allows the VM to have > access to network resources through a sort of 'virtual NIC' concept > which has worked well for me - it even lets the VM get it's own IP on > the network, even going so far as to allow the VM to do DHCP and get > an address that way. It should work no matter what the underlying > network truly is. (Note that the VM doesn't actually have control of > the network card - windows does, and VMWare does stuff underneath to > make it all look right to the VM). > > VMWare also lets the VM get to the CD or DVD-rom drive, or lets you > pretend an iso is a real disc. > > I've got older versions of FC and I've got the latest Ubuntu setup > under the current VMWare and they all work fine. There's no reason to > suspect that FC7 wouldn't work great. > > > > On 5/10/07, Tanguy Eric <eric.tanguy@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > I will have soon a new laptop with winxp. I would like to have fedora7 > > (when it will be out) running as an os on top of winxp. what would you > > recommend to do that ? Wmware ? Which version ? Other solutions ? > > > > When this system will run on top of winxp, is it possible to update, use > > ethernet and wifi and bluetooth, ... ? > > > > Thanks for the help > > > > Eric > > > > -- > > fedora-list mailing list > > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list > > > > > -- > Michael Kohne > mhkohne@xxxxxxxxx >