![]() Near the bottom of the page, you’ll find a selector for your host OS type (32 or 64 bit) and your language. The first step is to get Windows Virtual PC and the XP Mode installers. I use this to protect my main machine from the myriad beta and CTP’s I am running at the moment. The startup time is a bit slower than a desktop application, but this way you can work on your normal machine with virtualized applications that are separate from your operation system. it is running the virtual machine and remoting the application to the host. Notice the window chrome is from the Windows XP virtual machine. For example I can launch Firefox like a desktop application: The registry and drives are virtualized so when you save options/files they are saved on the host PC. The real trick is that if you install an application inside of a Virtual Machine (running XP, Vista or Win 7), you can launch it in the host OS like a normal application. Now I know you think you’ve been using this, but this (another unfortunate named product) is a repackaged Virtual PC that is very integrated into the OS. The real star of the show is “Windows Virtual PC”. I understand what Microsoft is trying to do and lessen the fear of people who have apps that work on XP but maybe not as well on Windows 7, but XP Mode is something entirely different. So I figured it was up to me to write a blog explaining it and why its so awesome.įirst of all, the term “XP Mode” is entirely the wrong name. I was chatting with Chris Sells today and I tried to explain what and how the XP Mode stuff worked and why I loved it so much, but to no avail. Now that Windows 7 has gone RTM (and I am anxiously awaiting it to appear on MSDN downloads), I am getting excited about the new operating system.
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