I hope this is not redundant but I want to emphasize the huge improvement in usability and stability after switching from the W7 Virtual XP environment to VMware (the free VMware Player).
I am forced into a virtual XP environment because my HP 7450C scanner software (specifically the Twain driver) is not willing to play with W7, rendering this perfectly good expensive scanner useless. I extensively use the scanner to file/store a relatively large number of documents using Paperport. Paperport works without any major issue under W7 but without scanner support it is useless. Therefore, Paperport must work under a virtual XP environment too since that is the only place the scanner can be used.
Ironically, under Windows Virtual XP, the HP PercisionScan Pro software worked fine but Paperport 12 now became unusable as it would crash 100% of the time immediately after starting it. It was necessary to use the older ver 11. Although ver 11 "worked", it still had a strong tendency to crash, some features behaved strangely, and it became very slow and kludgy. Each time it crashed it required restarting the computer to recover. In addition, the Virtual XP environment itself took much too long to start and I had to manually attach the scanner every time I started it.
The improvement using VMware is incredible. Using Paperport 12 is indistinguishable from using it under the native Windows 7 operating system. It is 100% stable and, except for one minor issue, using it in the VMware virtual XP environment is indistinguishable from using it in a normal W7 environment. What a refreshing improvement! The HP software also works without any issues. It is not at all different from the XP Pro computer I used before upgrading to W7.
Why does mighty Microsoft, with all their resources, include software that is so incredibly inferior to this free after market product (VMware Player)? Although W7 is excellent, and Virtual XP is just an "extra", I think it is a reasonable expectation that it should work to the same high standards that the product it came with does. I think MS would be better off not including it all rather than provide something that is so marginally usable.
I do have a local networking problem I have been unable to resolve. Under the VMware virtual XP environment, I have excellent access both my local network and the internet. In fact, I am storing the Paperport data on a DLink network RAID 0 drive. I can also, via the network, see the drives installed in the computer I am using but (and here is the problem) I cannot access these drives. This is proving frustrating as I have assured both drives (C: & D

have sharing for each drive enabled and all permissions are given. I have been unable to solve this problem and it is really pissing me off because I have a major issues being told by my computer I cannot access my own drives.