Convert Physical Machine to VM to run on 2nd PC?

Droid

New member
Is there a way to create a virtual machine in *.vdi format (Sun Virtual Box) from a physical machine, either from within the physical machine or by removing and accessing the HD from another system?

I do PC repair and often help people migrate their data to new computers. On occasion there is someone upgrading from an older machine with XP(32) to a Win7(64) and there are several programs that they will no longer be able to use. Rather than find solutions or workarounds for each incompatible program, it would be great to save their old system as a VM to be run on the new system. I ask for *.vdi format because I am fairly familiar with Virtual Box but have not used any other VM clients. If you know of a simple alternative that is capable of this type of migration then I am open to suggestions.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom - RaidMAX Smilodon case
OS
Windows 7 Ulimate Edition 32 Bit
CPU
Intel Quad Core Q6600 2.4GHz Overclocked @ 2.6GHz
Motherboard
eVGA nForce 750i
Memory
(2)x2GB OCZ Reaper DDR2 8500 1066MHz
Graphics Card(s)
eVGA SuperClocked Nvidia GeForce 8800GT OverClocked Editio
Sound Card
On-Board
Monitor(s) Displays
22" Vizio LCD TV
Hard Drives
(2)x Seagate Barracudas - 500GB SATA
PSU
Antec Earthwatts 500Watt
Case
RaidMAX Smilodon case
Cooling
Standard Fans and Sytrin Hard Drive Cooler

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
self built
OS
Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
CPU
Intel E8400 3GHz
Motherboard
Intel DX48BT2
Memory
Kingston PC3-10700H 4Gb
Graphics Card(s)
XFX Radeon HD 5850 BlackEd.
Sound Card
Asus Xonar DG
Monitor(s) Displays
2x Samsung SM-T220HD 22"
Screen Resolution
1680x1050 on two monitors
Hard Drives
OCZ Vertex 2 120gb 3.5" (OS)
Seagate Momentus XT 500gb
Samsung F3 1Tb (games)
2x Samsung F1 1Tb
PSU
Thermaltake ToughPower 850w
Case
Thermaltake Armor
Cooling
Scythe Mugen II
Keyboard
Microsoft Comfort Curve USB
Mouse
Razer Diamondback 3G
Internet Speed
8128/443
MyOldPCs does exactly that, converting physical computers to bootable .vdi, .vhd, .vmdk files, fully compatible with VirtualBox. Supports Windows 2000 and above.
 

My Computer

OS
windows 7
MyOldPCs does exactly that, converting physical computers to bootable .vdi, .vhd, .vmdk files, fully compatible with VirtualBox. Supports Windows 2000 and above.

Is this a free-full version program? The download page doesn't say anything about having to pay for it but it does say there is a trial version available.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom - RaidMAX Smilodon case
OS
Windows 7 Ulimate Edition 32 Bit
CPU
Intel Quad Core Q6600 2.4GHz Overclocked @ 2.6GHz
Motherboard
eVGA nForce 750i
Memory
(2)x2GB OCZ Reaper DDR2 8500 1066MHz
Graphics Card(s)
eVGA SuperClocked Nvidia GeForce 8800GT OverClocked Editio
Sound Card
On-Board
Monitor(s) Displays
22" Vizio LCD TV
Hard Drives
(2)x Seagate Barracudas - 500GB SATA
PSU
Antec Earthwatts 500Watt
Case
RaidMAX Smilodon case
Cooling
Standard Fans and Sytrin Hard Drive Cooler

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom - RaidMAX Smilodon case
OS
Windows 7 Ulimate Edition 32 Bit
CPU
Intel Quad Core Q6600 2.4GHz Overclocked @ 2.6GHz
Motherboard
eVGA nForce 750i
Memory
(2)x2GB OCZ Reaper DDR2 8500 1066MHz
Graphics Card(s)
eVGA SuperClocked Nvidia GeForce 8800GT OverClocked Editio
Sound Card
On-Board
Monitor(s) Displays
22" Vizio LCD TV
Hard Drives
(2)x Seagate Barracudas - 500GB SATA
PSU
Antec Earthwatts 500Watt
Case
RaidMAX Smilodon case
Cooling
Standard Fans and Sytrin Hard Drive Cooler
MyOldPCs is still in beta testing phase, so not public yet. A few hundred people are testing it now.
 

My Computer

OS
windows 7
About disk2vhd, for xp, the generated image won't boot in a vm, more thab 90%, if not 100%. It basically generates a mirror image of your disk, but virtual machine requires different hardware config. In other words, the virtual disk file has to be modified, especially for XP.

And it does not support windows 2k, or non NTFS systems.
 

My Computer

OS
windows 7
About disk2vhd, for xp, the generated image won't boot in a vm, more thab 90%, if not 100%. It basically generates a mirror image of your disk, but virtual machine requires different hardware config. In other words, the virtual disk file has to be modified, especially for XP.

And it does not support windows 2k, or non NTFS systems.
Thanks for the warning. I almost tried it for one of my win 2k boxes
 
no problem. The reason is w2k does not have the Microsoft Volume Shadow Copy driver. Pretty much all disk imaging software relies on that driver, which is available on XP and above. The Volume Shadow Copy driver provides a snapshot view of the disk.

This snapshot driver is very difficult to develop, it takes us years to implement it, and we have our own snapshot driver, so we can support win2k and other systems.
 

My Computer

OS
windows 7
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