I have not tried Windows 7 very much (only really use Windows at all if Wine will not give me a smooth solution), but I do hope they managed to turn the boat on this disaster of an OS. If not, I frankly do not understand how they can still entertain a customer base.
On Thu, Jun 28, 2012 at 2:13 PM, Christopher Svanefalk <christopher.svanefalk@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
So last day I got around to installing Vista. The last 12 hours have convinced me that this is arguably the worst operating system ever made, and booting back into F17 was bliss. I have not tried Windows 7 very much (only really use Windows at all if Wine will not give me a smooth solution).Reinstalling Grub with the F17 seems to be broken by the way...grub2-install throws an error. I did not record it unfortunately, but I am assuming it can be fixed. If nothing else, it is not problematic to use an earlier version for recovery unless you need Grub2.
On Thu, Jun 28, 2012 at 2:00 AM, Roger <arelem@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Deceptively simple and elegant solution, apply the DWPGA rule.
Delete Windows, problem goes away.
Solved problems on our computers.
R
Am 28.06.2012 01:30, schrieb Dave Ihnat:On Wed, Jun 27, 2012 at 11:16:28PM +0200, Christopher Svanefalk wrote:The license does not permit usage in a virtual machine, unfortunately.What license? AFAIK, none of the Windows licenses forbid running in a VM. Most versions of Windows don't make any provision for it.this is simply wrong http://www.microsoft.com/licensing/about-licensing/virtualization.aspx Licensing the Windows Desktop Operating System For Windows operating system software licensed through retail (FPP) or preinstalled on a PC (OEM), Windows use rights are outlined in the Software License Terms that accompany the software. These license terms provide use rights to run Windows locally on the licensed device in a virtual operating system environment (OSE); however they do not provide use rights for accessing Windows running remotely in a virtual OSE from the licensed device, and are limited in other ways when compared to virtualization use rights provided with Windows Software Assurance, Windows Intune, and Windows VDA licenses acquired through Microsoft Volume Licensing. For example, neither FPP nor OEM licenses permit remote access to a Windows virtual machine (VM) running in a datacenter. For this, a license obtained through Microsoft Volume Licensing is required.
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Best,Christopher Svanefalk
Best,
Christopher Svanefalk
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