Therese Trudeau wrote:
Don't bother. If you are a serious Adobe designer get
yourself a Mac and dual boot it between OS X and CentOS or
triple with Windows.
Or use parallels or vmware and run all 3 at once when you want... and
let the built in time machine tool do backups to an external firewire or
network drive.
Yes, even better. I think VMware sells a version of workstation for OS X
now too.
Yes, and I think it will run VM's created under VMware server on linux
or windows, although you may not be able to move them the other
direction with some of the options you can use on the mac or windows
workstation versions.
I just called VMWare and the guy said that for what I wanted to do,
a bare metal restore solution, that I would be better served by going with
either hardware or software raid maybe combined with something like
a tape backup solution, and that their desktop / workstation
applications are not suited as a complete backup - bare
metal restore solution. He said their system was mainly for taking
system snapshots for development purposes.
I didn't mean to always run under VMware. What you would want to do is
get your main application(s) working natively for best performance, then
use VMware for whatever else you might need that would otherwise need a
separate machine/OS. When you switch to Linux or a Mac, you often have
a few Windows programs that you may not use often but you can't
duplicate (the netflix online movie viewer, for example...). Running
windows under vmware means you don't have to keep a separate box around
for these. Then backups of the main system will automatically include
these without extra trouble too.
--
Les Mikesell
lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx
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