Mrkim Report This Comment Date: January 03, 2009 04:43AM
Ok Z, I'll bite. How'd you take a screenshot of a page that wasn't yet loaded
on 613 and then post it showing it already loaded .... inquiring minds wanna
know

jgoins Report This Comment Date: January 03, 2009 11:53AM
Didn't you know the Mac has a time travel option? Future or past at the click
of the mouse.
zxz555 Report This Comment Date: January 03, 2009 11:56AM
it is a screenshot from the
users online 613 page, nothing special
there, but zoom in and look at the details of my connection. You will see that
the entire Ubantu OS is emulated on the mac OS, meaning I have a choice of OS,
including windows should i choose to load it, all on one computer without
rebooting.
woberto Report This Comment Date: January 03, 2009 12:15PM
I've had 2 virtual OS's on my flashdrive for about 3 years now, nothing new
there. Getting unsuspecting machines to boot on my choice of OS is a good way to
circumvent password protection. But I have no need to have multiple OS's on a
PC. It's an excellent tool for developers however.
zxz555 Report This Comment Date: January 03, 2009 01:33PM
I had a Nintendo emulator on a pc 10 years ago, Woberto, point is that one
reason people do not like mac is that they won't have all the same programs they
had on their old pc, and booting into windows requires slicing up the hard drive
as well as time for switching between OSes. I just wanted to show how nice it
was to learn a new OS without buying a new computer

This is not a Macworld keynote speech.

woberto Report This Comment Date: January 03, 2009 02:17PM
It's pretty cool and I think I want one now just because.
I hope you PAID for both of the OS's...
pulse Report This Comment Date: January 03, 2009 03:04PM
Ubuntu, like the vast majority of Linux flavours, is free

Mrkim Report This Comment Date: January 03, 2009 03:24PM
Yep, anyone who would pay for Ubuntu should have CHOOM tatooed across their
forehead
So Z, you're usin an emulated version of Ubuntu through your Mac or is it
actually a fully loaded OS separate of your Mac OS? I guess what I'm askin is it
inside our along side your Mac OS?
I'm gonna hafta put together a dual boot Ubuntu/XP configuration so I can house
all my companys XP crap on the new machine I built for the office. If I knew how
to do it I'd emultae XP within an Ubuntu system, but I ain't near that slick
with a keeboard.
Honestly I dunno how to even import the old XP system onto the new machine due
the the friggin security key crap. I do have a corporate XP disc layin around a
buddy gave me that is fully legal and has a valid key and all but I dunno if I
can even import all the stuff from the old XP system into a fresh install
without borgin it all.
If all I needed was the files, that's a no brainer but with all the MS based
programs like Quick Books and such I am stuck with runnin a full blown XP OS to
be able to run the stuff. I HATE proprietary programs for this very reason ....
arrrrggghh

zxz555 Report This Comment Date: January 03, 2009 05:08PM
the mac OS is paid for and the reason i tried out Parallels with Ubantu, 64 bit

, was because it was free and I did not feel
like spending time with parrots, cutlases and unusually named bearded men.
The Ubantu installation is fully installed so it can save and load files &
programs, it is launched from the Parallels application. The Parallels app
creates a 35-ish Gb virtual drive (don't ask me how that works, it has not
changed any of the available drive space numbers

) and instals there. The people
over at
Parallels are
naturally not making any mention of Linux, instead opting for a marketing
strategy that promotes their product as an alternative to the mac dual boot
system.
Ubantu has been a bit slow to react sometimes, maybe because it has to share
resources, (on a macbook with 4GB RAM and 2.1 Ghz processor) but switching from
one OS to the other is as easy as ctrl+tab - Ubantu is in reality running as an
application within the mac OS.
I will add MS to the mix at some point but i have to get a copy first and I want
a legal one, I only pirate when I can justify it

woberto Report This Comment Date: January 03, 2009 11:14PM
sudo -s
****word
apt-get install wine
nic Report This Comment Date: January 04, 2009 05:41AM
i'm sure k knows about wine by now...
is a bitch to configure, i find, but then again i never really had very much
interest in ms shitty programs
now i have ps3, just got for xmas, and tried install ubuntu 8.10 and wound up
with a broken system... was really easy to fix (like pushing a button) but was
still disappointed and still kinda shaky from thinking i was gonna have to
somehow manage to fix 8.10 and then access the kboot to get it to boot the xmb
again, but no, didn't have to deal with that headache... i'm gonna trie install
7.10 next, i suppose, or use 'nother distro... has anyone here ever fucked with
this before?
woberto Report This Comment Date: January 04, 2009 06:41AM
ps3 uses old EPROM tech me thinks.
Let us know it it work out.
Mrkim Report This Comment Date: January 04, 2009 07:35AM
Actually, I got to thinkin about another way to do what I need and figure I'll
bounce it off you cats.
My current XP office machine and all it's damned XP required programs all exist
on its C Drive, right? How about just removin the drive and poppin it into the
new Ubuntu machine and then simply using a dual boot set up to log into Ubuntu
for email and web surfin then log outta Ubuntu and boot into the XP system as
needed for the MS only programs, which really isn't all that often.
The XP system already has IE disabled, at least as well as I can, and the XP
system will really need no web access, so I figure if I just uninstall the
Firefox and Opera browsers it now has, that should keep it off the web for good,
right? Or would I need to just fark up the network setting to insure it just
CAN NOT get on the web at all?
I'm not well versed enough in XPs intricasies to know if there are any hidden
snags or tricks I'd need to do for this to work, so anyone know if this is
really as simple as it sounds or is there some big whammy just waitin for me if
I try and do it this way?
I've fiddled with Wine a few times but never had a lot of success with it and
sure don't wanna risk totally snockerin my XP data. Whatever I do really needs
to be as safe as possible since blowin up my bookkeeping program,
customer/vendor database, etc. would be disasterous.
If anyone has any ideas or could point me in the direction to find out more
about all this, it would be a big help

woberto Report This Comment Date: January 04, 2009 08:50AM
If you have made a Ubuntu install CD then when you install from that CD it will
give you the option of creating a partition and installing Ubuntu as a dual boot
system without affecting your XP installation. Ubuntu will not run at it's
optimum but on a modern processor you may not notice any slack.
DarkKlown Report This Comment Date: January 04, 2009 09:56AM
You can stick old drives into current hardware and use vmware to emu the
booting of them from the drive inside your current OS. I kinda collect OS's and
have a drive with 20-30 of them all setup inside images that i can either mount
and tweak or mount and boot them in a *NIX based OS. Whenever we've had to run
windoze machines at work i've always set them up inside a linux box, for a
number of reasons least not that windows <whatever> is a POS to try and
workout hardware problems. If you emu the OS ontop of a OS that is good a
debugging problematic hardware you have less headaches. Just let windows run
it's pretty clicky stuff and let a real OS handle the underbelly of the
hardware.
I highly recommend OS emulation rather than dual booting with modern hardware. I
always recommend VMWare (http://vmware.com/) over pretty much anyone else, most
of their stuff is free nowadays due to them focusing on the corporate
market.
Some other emu software that is kinda cool is [
openxvm.org]
DarkKlown Report This Comment Date: January 04, 2009 09:57AM
Also woberto, yes any modern flavour of linux will let you resize an existing
partition table and setup dual boot with windows nicely. But remember to always
defrag a few times before resizing your partition tables and always backup!
woberto Report This Comment Date: January 04, 2009 12:04PM
I had troubles with the original VMware some years back but it still beats any
of the others I tried. I used to construct demonstration databases for other
consultants around the globe and due to setup variables & hardware miffs it
was not very reliable or consistent. However since vitualisation came into
mainstream I just virtualise my entire demo machine and they download that
(gotta remember to supply passwords). Virtual servers are the future, clients
I'm not too sure about yet.
pulse Report This Comment Date: January 04, 2009 09:22PM
vmware player is pretty good if you're downloading VM appliances, though with
vmware server (2.0 out now) being free you'd be mad to use anything else. It's
excellent.
Sun Microsystem's VirtualBox is coming along in leaps and bounds too, there were
some issues in earlier ones with getting networking running but I think they're
fixed now. I think I'll play around a bit more with that today, as it seems
happier supporting my monitor's resolution at work than VMware does with a linux
guest for some reason.
pulse Report This Comment Date: January 05, 2009 02:32AM
VirtualBox has come a long way, its networking support is MUCH better than it
was, and it's FAST - at least with Linux.
Happily running Ubuntu 8.10 w/X11 on my external monitor plugged into my work
laptop which has all the windows shite on its own screen and the other external
monitor.
Works a treat!
zxz555 Report This Comment Date: January 05, 2009 07:29AM
so why is it not possible to buy a machine with all 3 OSs preloaded and a good
virtual machine to run them all from a primary almost featureless OS?
What I mean is - why can't the OSes just learn love one-another?

GAK67 Report This Comment Date: January 06, 2009 12:26AM
That's easy to answer, z. $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$!