From: Wes Groleau on 26 Apr 2010 20:43 On 04-25-2010 20:00, Erik Richard Sørensen wrote: > The short answer is: Yes! - The a bit longer is that you can only run > one Windows system at a time in Parallels, so you will have to close the VMWare Workstation can run several VMs at a time (subject to RAM/disk resources, of course). My co-worker runs Mac OS, Win 7, Win XP, Win 2K, and Vista all at the same time. I think he's using Fusion, but I'm not sure. But he's got a MacBook Pro with max RAM and a 256 Gig SSD. -- Wes Groleau Trying to be happy is like trying to build a machine for which the only specification is that it should run noiselessly. -- unknown
From: Wes Groleau on 26 Apr 2010 20:45 On 04-25-2010 20:00, Erik Richard Sørensen wrote: > Someone told me that it should also be possible to run two or more > virtual systems at one and the same time.... I haven't tried this, so I > can't tell whether it'll work or not. - But one thing is for sure, /if/ > this is possible. but you will then have to use the same Paralllels, > Fusion or VirtualBox settings, since you can't make different setting > for each Windows/Linux system. I'll go out on a limb and guess that Fusion is similar to the Win versions of VMWare--in which _each_ VM has it's _own_ rather large list of preferences/settings. -- Wes Groleau New “Telenovelas” Web Page http://Ideas.Lang-Learn.us/russell?itemid=1032
From: Erik Richard Sørensen on 26 Apr 2010 22:08 Wes Groleau wrote: > On 04-25-2010 20:00, Erik Richard Sørensen wrote: >> The short answer is: Yes! - The a bit longer is that you can only run >> one Windows system at a time in Parallels, so you will have to close the > > VMWare Workstation can run several VMs at a time (subject to RAM/disk > resources, of course). > > My co-worker runs Mac OS, Win 7, Win XP, Win 2K, and Vista all at the > same time. I think he's using Fusion, but I'm not sure. But he's got a > MacBook Pro with max RAM and a 256 Gig SSD. Hm, if so, - could be one should switch to Fusion then.:-) - Sometimes I need to be able to test something in more systems at the same time, and then it'd be faster to do it yourself instead of calling a friend with the needed system.:-) Cheers, Erik Richard -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Erik Richard Sørensen, Member of ADC, <mac-manNOSP(a)Mstofanet.dk> NisusWriter - The Future In Multilingual Text Processing - www.nisus.com OpenOffice.org - The Modern Productivity Solution - www.openoffice.org ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
From: Peter James on 27 Apr 2010 09:10 John Wolf <jwolf6589(a)THUNDERBIRDgmail.com> wrote: > On 4/22/10 10:14 PM, Jeffrey Goldberg wrote: > > No, I haven't found Jesus, but what I'm going to announce may be more > > shocking. > > Tom nothing can be more shocking than finding the savior and getting > saved from your sins and the fires of Hell. Tom I urge you to repent and > come to Christ! Check out the pages below. I remember a Catholic priest telling me once, that the answer to my problem with religion was to have faith. How the hell can you have faith when you don't believe, and how can you repent when you have no sense of being wrong. If Jesus wants me for a sunbeam he'd better make the sun shine a lot. Peter -- He spoke with a certain what-is-it in his voice, and I could see that, if not actually disgruntled, he was far from being gruntled. P.G. Wodehouse 1881 -1975
From: Howard Brazee on 27 Apr 2010 15:15
On Tue, 27 Apr 2010 14:10:01 +0100, pfjames2000(a)googlemail.com (Peter James) wrote: >> Tom nothing can be more shocking than finding the savior and getting >> saved from your sins and the fires of Hell. Tom I urge you to repent and >> come to Christ! Check out the pages below. >I remember a Catholic priest telling me once, that the answer to my >problem with religion was to have faith. How the hell can you have >faith when you don't believe, and how can you repent when you have no >sense of being wrong. It's a matter of wrongthink. Christian theology says you are saved by believing what Christians believe. The vast majority of everybody is allowed to be tortured beyond all understanding forever and ever without hope of parole - for being fooled. Obviously this is because an omnipotent, loving father has a good reason for allowing this. -- "In no part of the constitution is more wisdom to be found, than in the clause which confides the question of war or peace to the legislature, and not to the executive department." - James Madison |