Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Run Windows inside another Windows

This is our first Post which categorized as Windows T'n'Ts (Tips and Tricks). This tutorial will show you "How to run Windows inside another Windows". Our goal is to keep you up-to-date and be active to do these types of tasks. So, lets go to our main point.
First of all you need to download a software named Virtual PC (Sometimes, Virtual Machine). There are many providers on internet which provides their own Virtual PC softwares. The top softwares from them are: Microsoft Virtual PC or Windows Virtual PC, Oracle VM VirtualBox, Google Compute Engine.
We recommended you to download Microsoft Virtual PC. Download it from here, or copy this http://www.microsoft.com/en-pk/download/details.aspx?id=3702 and paste in browser bar.
Microsoft Virtual PC 2007 is the best.

Now that is the time to follow the steps and tell us how was your experience:

STEP-1: Build your Virtual Machine
Once you've downloaded the installation package, launch it and follow instructions. Then click the Start menu and find Virtual PC. It will launch a Wizard that offers the choice of opening an existing virtual PC, creating one with default settings or will walk you through the process of configuring one yourself. Pick the latter to do things like increasing the RAM available to the VM from the default of 128 MB to a gigabyte, or raise the default virtual hard disk size from 16 GB to something with enough room for an OS and any applications you want to run only within the VM. The whole process takes less time than it does to install most bits of freeware. But that's only the configuration, not the VM itself.

STEP-2: Launch and Provision
After configuration, the Virtual PC Console remains onscreen while Virtual PC runs in the background, taking up about 17 MB of memory just sitting there.
Clicking Start opens a command window in which Virtual PC uses DHCP to try to find itself an IP address. If you haven't already provisioned an operating system image, it will think about things for a while, then tell you to go find a proper boot address.
To install the OS from a CD or ISO file, make sure the window surrounding the VM (the actual VM which looks at this point like a DOS window, not the console you used to set the configuration) is the active window on your machine. Then either insert the CD into the drive or drag your ISO file onto the CD icon in the Virtual PC command window. If you're loading the OS from a CD, go to the menu bar of the VM window, click on CD and tell it to capture the physical CD drive.
My VM didn't like 64-bit versions of either Windows 7 or Vista, but was fine with a 32-bit version of XP Home Edition. The install takes about as long as it would on a normal hard drive, but instead of asking what partition of your hard drive it should live in, it shows only unpartitioned space on the virtual hard drive you've already set up.
The install then proceeds normally, within one window of your PC rather than taking up the whole thing.
Warning: The VM doesn't know it's not the only computer on your computer. So when you click on anything in its window, will capture the cursor and not let it go again, which would be really embarrassing if anyone wandered in to see why you were cursing at your laptop.
To free your cursor, hit the right ALT key. If the VM is running in full screen mode, press right-ALT-ENTER.
After setup, walk through the configuration screen and type in a valid Windows key for the version of the OS you installed.
STEP-3: Install Additions
Before you can do anything interesting you have to install a set of addons that allow Virtual PC to do things like share folders, share the clipboard and drag and drop things between the VM window and the host OS. You have to install them separately, using the VM window, not the Virtual PC Console.
Go to the Menu bar of the VM and click Action, then pull down to Install or Update Virtual Machine Additions. It will pop up a window asking you to confirm, and then disappear as if you were kidding.
To actually run the installer, which the VM believes is either a CD or an ISO file, go to the Start button, then choose Run and navigate to what would normally be the CD drive, where you'll find the Additions ISO. Open the folder appropriate to your host OS and run the application inside. Then reboot the VM.
STEP-4: Load Applications
Like most things virtual, loading applications or accessing data on the host machine is like walking across a transparent bridge. Once you know it's there, it's simple. Until you do, you're stuck.
The bridge in this case is the Shared Folder. Just as with two physically separate machines, you can exchange data or applications through a Shared Folder that both have permission to use.
Create one from the VM window. Click on Edit in the menu bar, pull down to Settings and look for the Shared Folders icon toward the bottom. Choose it, navigate to a folder on the host machine that you can use to move documents or application setup files between your real and virtual machines, and click OK.
The shared folder becomes a network drive for the VM. To launch applications, click on Start, Run, and browse to the "network drive" Z:\ , which retains the name of the folder itself. Then just launch the setup for the new application.
That's it. You're done. Well, almost.
STEP-5: Stay Safe
Don't forget to install all the security updates for the new OS and install whatever antivirus or other security software you have on the host OS. The VM has to route all its traffic through your (presumably) secured host OS, but that doesn't mean a ZIP file or other potential threat won't get through and launch on the VM.
A few more warnings and tips from Steve Bass of the useful and amusing TechBite newsletter.
* If you defrag your hard drive, exclude the humungous swap file the virtual PC creates (check Options in your defragger), or it will take forever to complete.
* Some virtual PC software, including VMWare's, let you save multiple versions on your machine. Each can gobble gigabytes, however. Keep an eye on available disk space, especially on a notebook.
* Running Win7, XP and Linux on the same machine at the same time is cool, but unless your system is a monster, you'll spend more time waiting than computing.
* Finished with XP Mode or your Virtual PC for now? Shut it down to free up system resources for the rest of your work.
And another couple of warnings, from Bob Arnson, who works for Microsoft on its App-V team, but blogs as his own geek.
* When you launch a VM it still needs an operating system and applications, which take time to set up the first time around. You can clone your main OS with tools such as Acronis True Image, but it still takes time to do the install. Once you have the image, though, taking one VM down and launching another is much faster than reinstalling an OS or application on real hardware.
* The VM isn't a real machine, but it uses a real OS, for which you need a licence. And if you want to connect a cloned OS to a domain, you have to use a tool like SysReq software distribution utility.

1 comment:

  1. Become rich today and take the risk of transforming your own life. Try and get a blank ATM card today from (Mr Williams) and be among the lucky ones who are benefiting from this cards. This PROGRAMMED blank ATM card is capable of hacking into any ATM machine,anywhere in the world. I got to know about this BLANK ATM CARD when I was searching for job online about a month ago..It has really changed my life for good and now I can say I'm rich because am a living testimony. The least money I get in a day with this card is about $4,000. i can also withdraw up to $65,000 a month now and then I keeping pumping money into my account. Though is illegal, there is no risk of being caught ,because it has been programmed in such a way that it is not traceable, it also has a technique that makes it impossible for the CCTV to detect you..For details on how to get yours today,Email the hackers on: williamshackers@hotmail.com

    ReplyDelete