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Plex86 Boots Linux In Normal Mode

Kevin Lawton writes: "Plex86 just reached the 'Linux squared' state. I just got plex86 running on a Linux Mandrake 7.1 host, to boot an old RedHat 5.0 disk image file (installed with bochs some time ago). CVS updates coming in the next few days. Next on the chopping block are the MS Windows OSen! "

3 of 118 comments (clear)

  1. Re:So how does it compare... by tomita · · Score: 5
    Probably not.

    Does it

    Support printers?

    Support audio devices?

    Support video modes other than text?

    Provide graphical configuration?

    Support accelerated display via DGA?

    Support floppy drives?

    Support ip through the host's adaptor?

    Support serial ports

    Support fullscreen mode.

    Of course it doesn't. Vmware does all these things today. Not a year from now, or two years. Not just on linux. Buy a copy of vmware. They deserve your dollars, and you deserve their fabulous piece of software.

    And no, I don't work for them

  2. Start counting... by Ektanoor · · Score: 5

    I still rememeber how, some years ago, OS/2 decided to overcome Windows. Unfortunately M$ did a smart move in time, by launching Win95. Most of OS/2 Windows emulation was based on 16 bit Windows. Besides, the mixed nature of Win95 (it has both 16/32 bit code) and its weird integration/embedding, made the transfer of Win32 code to OS/2 a nearly impossible task. During the years, it seems that IBM tried several times to recover from this blow. However M$ managed to smartly maneuver and avoid the danger. First by forcing IBM to accept its supermacy on market. Second by smartly destroing those who could help IBM to move OS/2 forward.

    Today the situation is pretty different. First people don't wanna move from a classic Win32 basis, that has established deep roots. Most people use, for years, Win98/NT. Some have transferred to Win00, but this OS looks more as a continuation of old NT traditions. So, improvements are more superfluous than useful. The only good thing is that it is stable for a larger field of activies than Win98/NT.

    In the mean time I have seen that M$ customers became quite conservative. The new great WinMe looks as the biggest M$ fiasco since th ill-famous DOS 4.0. Apart from this, we have to note that M$ does not promise any inovations in the short future.

    Right now the Linux front presents three great achievements:

    VMWare is working stable and fast on Linux.

    Recently Wine started to launch such important apps like Word00 & Excel00

    Now Plex86 seems set forward to start implementing Windows emulation on Linux

    If nothing changes, than soon we may face the fact that te last M$ bastion will fall. If M$ does not have in its hat a new rabbit or a new OS implementation then it will surely loose ground. First by those who don't need anymore "two OS's in one hardware". Second becaudse many average users will be able to launch M$ soft on linux.

    So time to start counting backwards...

  3. No, no by Green+Monkey · · Score: 5
    ...it's GNU/Linux! What you really meant to say is that you can run GNU's Not Unix's Not Unix's Not Unix's Not Unix's Not Unix's Not Unix's Not Unix / Linux inside Linux inside Linux inside Linux inside Linux inside...

    Oh dear.

    --

    Green Monkey