Re: A general strategy for retaining XyWrite in a non-DOS world

  • From: Kari Eveli <lexitec@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: xywrite@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Mon, 26 May 2014 17:08:21 +0300

Harry,

I am not quite sure what you mean by configuration jiggering inherent in virtualization. My experience is one of ultimate hardware stability vis-à-vis the guest operating system as it is invariable being part of the virtualization platform. For some purposes it may be meaningful to maintain or build a separate DOS machine, but I do not see the point of maintaining W2K or XP machines as they can be more easily virtualized or emulated. I see no slowdown in running DOS/Win 3.1: if I save the VM's state, it is instantly available in VirtualPC 2007. W2K in VirtualBox is almost as fast.

But if you like physical computers more than virtual ones, then a KVM switch solution might be for you. With quality KVM equipment it is possible to have many systems at your fingertips, provided they are reasonably modern. USB connectivity makes this practical. Still there are industrial systems for true legacy (AT-style) hardware, but they might prove to be disappointing.

Best regards,

Kari Eveli
LEXITEC Book Publishing (Finland)
lexitec@xxxxxxxxxx

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25.5.2014 19:31, Harry Binswanger wrote:
Advantages: None of the slowdowns or configuration jiggering and
re-jiggering required for virtual machines. Low cost--zero, if you already
have such a machine in your closet.

Disadvantages: Networking is even flakier, flukier, funkier than virtual
machine settings; but then Dropbox is amazingly robust, transparent, fast.

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