How many vms do you have Cred Forums?
How many vms?
about 4. they are all virtual servers tho.
...
4-5 of them.
Windows 7
>use it for a few hours a day for work
Windows 10
>just have it for when Win7 support is over, since it's a legit copy
>open it a few times a month to look around
Windows 3.11
>for the lulz
Lubuntu
>no specific reason why I still have this, can't remember when I last used it
And I sometimes have a fifth one for testing purposes or trying out different distros. The last one I tried out was CentOS.
6.
Windows 2000 - "daily" driver. Stupidly lightweight thing that compiles and runs Win32 programs.
Windows NT 3.1 - Literally useless. Installed out of curiosity. Can't even run anything.
Windows 3.1 - As an experiment I got networking running on VirtualBox. I'm actually amazed it worked. Thanks, random Novell Netware CD I found somewhere.
Windows NT 4.0 - The only reason I have this is because I have a Pentium 4 with Windows NT 4.0, and I use this VM as a testing ground for drivers and stuff.
Windows 7 - Downloaded from Microsoft's site. (modern.ie) Never used.
Windows XP - Also from modern.ie. For that once in a blue moon occasion where Windows 2000 and WINE aren't enough.
Only one
...
Sup fellow Proxmox user
What's the best VM solution for servers today? I use VMware on the desktop, but it would be nice if I could programmatically create vms on a box and such...
a debian one for smokeping and a mavericks one in case i ever want a hackintosh
(Get-VM).Count
29
In the process of moving around lab and production. The count can be as low as 8, and as high as 117, depending on what I'm doing.
ive got a couple
Are there still people on Cred Forums not using Qubes?
LOL thought this was a technology forum not a normie convention
Qubes is a meme
My niggas
17, mostly linux
Running KVM on Ubuntu for hypervisor
Have they finally fixed the UI crash problem? It's been a few years since I switched to pure KVM. I wanted to stick with it but randomly losing all access to the interface was a deal-breaker.
On a side note I've been tempted to try out Nutanix Acropolis with their Prism interface.
about 5 at home, about 30 at work.
Had MiRC scripts I wanted to run instead of migrating everything over to Ubuntu.
None. VMs are an annoying hassle and I don't really have a use case for them.
>beos
>haiku
>xenix
>ecomstation
>windows 98se
the duck are you doing with those?
>everything but Windows 98
just checking out operating systems
>Windows 98
Zoombinis
what kind of hardware is under all of those?
Right now I've got a couple older VMs to condense down, otherwise I've got a pretty decent crop for a middling desktop machine.