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Re: Finding W2K was Re: La Machine Est Morte, Vive La Machine!
- Subject: Re: Finding W2K was Re: La Machine Est Morte, Vive La Machine!
- From: Kari Eveli lexitec@xxxxxxxx
- Date: Wed, 23 Jul 2014 09:44:19 +0300
Bill,
You can configure networking from Machine, Settings, Network. The
default is NAT, which is protected from surreptitious attacks from the
outside, but you have Net access if you need it (for updating programs
in situ, etc.). If you do not do anything foolish, this works ok and
presents no great risk. For other options, see e.g.
http://www.thomas-krenn.com/en/wiki/Network_Configuration_in_VirtualBox
and
https://www.virtualbox.org/manual/ch06.html
Further down the line, you can adjust network settings through the W2K
control panel, setting trusted domains, etc. Just as in your main machine.
>This is my one problem with VMware, and I think VBox behaves the same.
It very occasionally happens that my primary system (Win 8) crashes.
When it does, the VM session is completely lost. I have to boot W2K
fresh (admittedly this only takes a few seconds) and start Xy4 again,
having lost any unsaved data. Surely there must be a technique of some
kind for dealing with this - - setting up safe points every 15 minutes
or so, perhaps? I would be very grateful for any input.
You should fix your setup. It should never crash. VMware has a service
called snapshot for preserving current VMs. You can make this work by
installing the command line tools, and running:
vmrun snapshot path/.vmx from a cmd file (or by scheduling through Windows).
See: https://www.vmware.com/support/ws55/doc/ws_learning_cli_vmrun.html
Best regards,
Kari Eveli
LEXITEC Book Publishing (Finland)
lexitec@xxxxxxxx
*** Lexitec Online ***
Lexitec in English: http://www.lexitec.fi/english.html
Home page in Finnish: http://www.lexitec.fi/
22.7.2014 21:20, Bill Troop wrote:
I am not sure - - but doubtless Kari knows - - how to enable or
disable Internet access in W2K/VM-of-choice. I only found that when I
installed W2K from the ISO I have mentioned, Internet Access was
turned off. If I recall, Harry, it was you who informed me of the test
I needed to make to ensure that I did not have Internet access. What I
wanted was not to have Internet access but to give W2K/XyWrite
complete access to my host drive, and this has worked out with
remarkably little trouble.