Virtualization of operating systems used to be slow and hard to use. Advances such as the KQemu accelerator, VirtualBox, VMWare, Xen and of course the recent integration of KVM virtualization into the Linux kernel have helped out a lot though, especially on the server side, but for a normal user, virtualization could be somewhat clunky. Mac users have been able to run their Windows applications like this using
Parallels Coherence, yet now other *nix users can too. Ordinary desktop or business users who require applications from another operating system can benefit from a
seamless desktop.
Member since:
2006-11-02
Great idea, but maybe you should link to the tutorial about the "seamless" part. It's found right here:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/SeamlessVirtualization
And, I've been wondering what sort of impact qemu+kqemu has on a) performance vs VMWare and native, and b) battery life
Edited 2007-03-21 17:51