I agree. The simpler, the better.
Questor
--->
> I am not certain about this. For audio settings VirtualBox does have a
> setting that involves DirectSound. I recently reinstalled Vista and
> haven't yet reinstalled VirtualBox so I can't do any checking for you.
> The original poster found a solution to the problem that does seem much
> simpler.
>
> Regards
> Chris Saunders
>
> "Questor" <> wrote in message
> news:...
>> Absolutely, Chris. There are several other out there too. I only
>> mentioned MS VPC as a 'generic' answer to the OP. Your solution is
>> probably a better one if the old application needs more video RAM.
>> MSVPC doesn't support DirectX or OpenGL either (I think). Does
>> VirtualBox?
>>
>> Questor
>>
>> --->
>>> There is also VirtualBox from Sun. I noticed that you mentioned that
>>> video was restricted on the Microsoft Virtual PC to 4 or 8
>>> megabytes. On VirtualBox you can have 128 megabytes of video
>>> memory. I have found myself unable to run Solaris on Microsoft
>>> Virtual PC but it runs fine on VirtualBox. I'm using Vista Ultimate
>>> 64-bit. I have found VirtualBox to be my favorite amongst the few I
>>> have tried.
>>>
>>> Regards
>>> Chris Saunders
>>>
>>> "Questor" <> wrote in message
>>> news:...
>>>> --->
>>>>> I'm on a HP, running 64 bit Vista. 2.1GHz Dual Core, 4GB DDR2
>>>>> SDRAM. (I don't really speak "computer" very well)
>>>>>
>>>>> I am trying to run some 10 year old software. It installed fine, but
>>>>> when I try to run it the program first does a check to make sure I
>>>>> have
>>>>> enough available RAM. When it checks my Free RAM it says I have
>>>>> -130MB
>>>>> of Free RAM and the program won't even try to start.
>>>>>
>>>>> Now - I understand from reading these forums that VISTA ties up all
>>>>> available RAM. Is there a way to tell VISTA to keep some 80MB or so
>>>>> free so that my software will start?
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Sounds like your older software would be a candidate for a Virtual
>>>> Machine. It's free - just check the Microsoft site for it. Once
>>>> installed you can put whatever operating system you may have lying
>>>> around on it (or what the software really wants). It's like having
>>>> another machine inside your physical machine. You can assign RAM,
>>>> ports, and such to it. The video emulated is only 4 or 8 MB (I
>>>> forget which) but that may not be important depending on your software.
>>>>
>>>> I have seven virtual machines on my Vista machine all running
>>>> various flavors of Windows and Linux.
>>>>
>>>> Questor
>>>
>
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