G
George Neuner
Guest
On Thu, 10 Oct 2013 10:07:08 -0400, Phil Hobbs
<pcdhSpamMeSenseless@electrooptical.net> wrote:
VMware Converter creates VM images from existing installations. Note
that I have only used it on Windows and have *not* tried it on a Linux
box, but I have been told it is pretty straightforward with most
systems.
Whether it is worthwhile depends on the devices involved. Obviously
there is no point if you depend on some bus card device that can't be
transported to a newer host. But VMware has no problem with USB,
serial, parallel and most SCSI devices - it even handles many of the
partial SCSI implementations typical of printers and scanners.
George
<pcdhSpamMeSenseless@electrooptical.net> wrote:
On 10/09/2013 11:04 PM, George Neuner wrote:
VMware also runs *on* Linux hosts
Of course. But that won't preserve an existing installation.
VMware Converter creates VM images from existing installations. Note
that I have only used it on Windows and have *not* tried it on a Linux
box, but I have been told it is pretty straightforward with most
systems.
Whether it is worthwhile depends on the devices involved. Obviously
there is no point if you depend on some bus card device that can't be
transported to a newer host. But VMware has no problem with USB,
serial, parallel and most SCSI devices - it even handles many of the
partial SCSI implementations typical of printers and scanners.
George