In Backspin this week I ponder why Microsoft would prohibit the use of Vista Home Basic or Vista Home Premium in a virtual machine and I advocate commercial disobedience.
By Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 12/07/2006 - 10:43pm.
Virtualization on the desktop may be relatively new (5 - 10 years old). But as a whole (PC's + mainframes) it's roughly thirty (30!) years old. The first commercial VM was IBM's VM/370 on their mainframes in the 1970's. So the maturity issue is BULLCRAP !
Down with microsoft
Up with linux
Heaven yes to virtualization, and some HypeWare
Hello Mark,
it is interesting to see the beginning
of the the war between the virtual machines,
as you can read in my blog here.
have a great day,
Roland Sassen
Virtualization's Maturity
Virtualization on the desktop may be relatively new (5 - 10 years old). But as a whole (PC's + mainframes) it's roughly thirty (30!) years old. The first commercial VM was IBM's VM/370 on their mainframes in the 1970's. So the maturity issue is BULLCRAP !