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#31
Thank you for the tutorial, but my hard drive issue is that it's only 18 gigabytes in size. I would have about 80% of the hard drive covered by 7 alone. At the moment, I only have 3 gigabytes left with XP installed.[/QUOTE]
What size if your HDD (2.5 or 3.5).![]()
RIP XP, im gonna miss you.![]()
Well I still have my XP drive since I can't get Elaboratebytes Clonedvd2 and Gamejackel pro to work on Seven 64 bit. And I paid for them before they put a 2 year limit on the licence. So I keep my XP to burn DVD's and that's about it. Until I get my laptop back from my Nephew then bye bye XP on this machine. Fabe
Hi all
I still have to keep XP around (or at least W2K3 Server) as a VM for these applications :
1) SAP DB applications on Oracle still need a 32 BIT OS ( I can run the front end SAPGUI from W7 X-64 no problem but the DB server still only runs on 32 bit OS'es PRIOR to W7 - I never used VISTA 32 bit so the W2K3 server is just fine.
2) I Rip my music to FLAC - but then still use Minidisc Players for portable music - and RECORDING devices. To get Music on to the MD device I create a "Virtual CD" from my FLAC music and "Burn" to MD with the simple burning application which ONLY runs on XP / W2K3 systems or earlier -- this software won't even run on VISTA. I'm not a big fan of hideously compressed MP3 formatted music -- ATRAC3 at 256 or 320 beats MP3 HANDS DOWN anytime even though it's a proprietary format.
3) I have some old "Blue Print" architectural printing devices -- the original Manufacturer has long since vanished so these devices will only rtun on earlier OS'es.
4) I still prefer WORD 2003 although the rest of the office suite I use 2007 and now 2010. It's still good to be able to fire up a Virtual machine running Office 2003 If I get into a tangle with the wretched ribbon in Office 2007 / 2010. Some of my work stuff also needs Office 2003 compatability so using 2003 from time to time I won't get suckered into using the new features which will cause problems when saving work documents.
I have a few other legacy programs such as Horse Racing and Financial trading stuff which is a bit to complicated to re-work for W7 -- these need the older .NET stuff and I'm not a programmer so they can stay on XP / W2K3.
I agree with everybody on these forums that W7 is a much nicer / better OS but there are still lots of perfectly valid reasons for keeping XP / W2K3 as a VM around for a good while yet. Modern hardware makes running Virtual Machines a real easy choice too -- the speed can be almost as fast as 100% Native OS operation too.
Cheers
jimbo