Linked by David Haring on Thu 15th Apr 2004 21:14 UTC
Imagine this scenario: you need to run your favorite application under Linux but the application has not been ported to Linux yet and there is no other alternative that would completely suit your needs. Or you need to work with several operating systems.
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Any chance that I could use this to run BeOS as a guest OS? I've got BeOS software that I'd like to run, but on modern hardware it gets more and more difficult to get BeOS to function properly. It seems like something like this might be usable as a "bridge" to make up for BeOS's lack of modern drivers (similar to how I can run Amiga programs on my PC with an emulator, despite the PC's lacking the Amiga's custom graphics processors)
Any chance that I could use this to run BeOS as a guest OS? I've got BeOS software that I'd like to run, but on modern hardware it gets more and more difficult to get BeOS to function properly. It seems like something like this might be usable as a "bridge" to make up for BeOS's lack of modern drivers (similar to how I can run Amiga programs on my PC with an emulator, despite the PC's lacking the Amiga's custom graphics processors)