[ale] VM ? (addendum: without windows licenses?)

James Taylor James.Taylor at eastcobbgroup.com
Tue Feb 27 08:37:56 EST 2007


I have found CrossOver Office to be excellent, especially on the apps they explicitly support.
There are some problematic apps, such as Quicken, that seem to do weird system level stuff that don't work, but it would be worth testing against.  It's a very easy install and they've taken care of most of the 'fiddling' part.
-jt



James Taylor
The East Cobb Group, Inc.
678-697-9420
james.taylor at eastcobbgroup.com
http://www.eastcobbgroup.com










>>> On Tue, Feb 27, 2007 at  7:25 AM, in message
<20070227122522.GA16767 at cleon.cc.gatech.edu>, Byron A Jeff
<byron at cc.gatech.edu> wrote: 
> On Mon, Feb 26, 2007 at 10:59:37PM - 0500, Michael B. Trausch wrote:
>> On Mon, 2007- 02- 26 at 18:44 - 0500, Paul Cartwright wrote:
>> 
>> > hmm... my DELL didn't come with a CD, it's on that stupid rescue partition.
>> 
>> 
>> I hate that.  
>> 
>> However, by way of technical restrictions, I am not permitted to
>> actually use my license of Windows in any way that I want.  In essence,
>> Toshiba and Microsoft are telling me that I am not allowed to run this
>> copy of Windows in an emulated environment, implying that I have to buy
>> a new Windows XP license to do that.  
> 
> It's for this reason that I'm only interested in envinronments that doesn't
> require a copy of Windows to run.
> 
> Does anyone have an accurate representation on the usefulness of Wine and/or
> Crossover? In the past I just haven't had enough patience to fiddle with
> either of them in order to see if they actually work with any degree of
> reasonableness. I generally spend my focus working with native Linux apps,
> which I feel is worth the time to fiddle.
> 
> But the reality is that we live in a world where most folks believe that
> Windows is inexorably bound to their computers. So as with the OP who is 
> fine working with Linux, the SO is not. She needs that one or two Windows
> applications that she cannot live without.
> 
> I'm working with a couple of non profits who are in somewhat of the same
> situation. There's a couple of custom applications built in VB that one
> would like to run remotely from a central applications server. Costing out
> terminal server and CALs is a real headache. A Linux applications server
> for windows applications without Windows licenses would be a real benefit.
> 
> In short, I'd like to get the ability to run the occasional Windows app 
> without
> having to have a Windows license. 
> 
> Anyone doing this?
> 
> BAJ
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