Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Virtual PC Resources

Resource for getting started with Virtual PC

Because I just introduced Virtual PC to a few new colleagues at work, I've collected here various resources used in the last year or two in my use of Virtual PC, from emails, favorites, etc.


Microsoft Virtual PC 2007 Technical Reference

A good starting point for setting up your first Virtual PC, using a established, supported OS such as Windows 98, 2000 or XP


TechNet Webcast: Microsoft Virtual PC Technical Overview - Level 200

I’ve previously used this webcast to introduce Virtual PC to teams new to the product, It’s a 2004 version, but other than slight differences in look-and-feel in 2007, as an end-user, the features hold true.


Virtual PC Guy

Good blog about issues with Virtual PC, setting up uncommon scenarios, alternative OS's, etc.


Specific Platforms

Microsoft VHD Downloads
Microsoft makes available a number of platforms as pre-build virtual hard drives, typically as an time-limited evaluation, but in some situations, I've been able to then authorize them with the MSDN product keys when using for dev or test purposes. The Server 2003/2008 VHDs especially are great for starting off an eval of a server product, rather than stepping through the OS install...every...time.

Installing a New Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 Portal: Step-by-Step Instructions
Not specifically addressing Virtual PC installations, but a common task for within a Virtual PC/Server (Download the evaluation edition)

Installing Microsoft Virtual PC and a DOS Virtual Machine
Haven't came up with an actual useful need for the DOS VM yet, but just having it and being able to boot it quickly drives the point home about being able to use Virtual PC for legacy support.

Linux
Installing Ubuntu 8.04 under Microsoft Virtual PC 2007
This was the most painless Linux distribution to install from scratch on a Virtual PC. But because if you're far from a master of the Linux, but need a test bed for some web apps - the LAMP Virtual Appliance was a great out of the box solution. This is a prebuilt Virtual Hard Drive you can add as Virtual PC, and is preconfigured with a very light-weight Linux no GUI, Apache web server, mySQL database, and the PHP, Perl, and Python engines. (To fully access it from your host relies on some reverse DNS configurations I didn't know, but it for my purposes, was easy enough to alias the IP address and use that)

1 comment:

Unknown said...

JumpBox also has a large collection of virtual machines for various applications that work on Virtual PC and Virtual Server.