Subj : Re: WINDOWS 2008 62 bit Server with Win XP
To   : All
From : RUBEN FIGUEROA
Date : Thu Jan 31 2019 07:12 pm

Date: Thu, 08 Nov 2012 13:43:46 -0400
From: RUBEN FIGUEROA
To: All
Subject: Re: WINDOWS 2008 62 bit Server with Win XP
Newsgroups: win.server.program
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
X-Mailer: Wildcat! Interactive Net Server v7.0.454.5
Lines: 69

To me that would be invaluable.  Running on Windows Server 2003 and
unwilling to upgrade machine and OS unless I can run my legacy doors.  I
have a number of elderly users who come here just to play my door games,
the card versions, of all types, using JNS card games.

I am better than the average user but I am not proficient in any of
what you both have been writing (headless, what's next) about.  Though I
can follow directions/instructions.  It is how I learn much of what I
have learned.




-> Greg

-> Your definitely on the right path.

-> I think for anyone with a requirement to run legacy Operating Systems or
-> 8/16 bit application it is the best course to follow rather than looking
-> for hacks or emulation software.

-> Time permitting it would be worth you documenting your experience as it
-> could assist other legacy door users and perhaps should be a tech note in
-> Hectors knowledge base.

-> Mike

-> On 11/5/2012 3:55 AM, GREG YOUNGBLOOD wrote to MICHAEL PURDY:

-> -> Morning Mike
-> ->
-> -> Right now it is on a single core xeon e server IBM but I will be moving
it
-> -> to a Dell Quad core poweredge server with 16 gigs of ram so I should be
-> -> good to go there.
-> ->
-> -> The last thing I did last night was move the VM to another nic card so I
-> -> will be testing that today and tomorrow.
-> ->
-> -> Thanks for the tips though, I fell a little better knowing I'm going in
-> -> the right direction.
-> ->
-> -> Greg
-> ->
-> -> -> You can run VB on a single core with 4G Memory but put simply that
-> -> isn't the target platform
-> -> ->
-> -> -> The assumption is that you will be running on a server (not desktop)
-> -> with
-> -> -> max RAM and at least a Quad Core+.  A dual core will work but you
-> -> would be
-> -> -> limited to a very small number of Virtual Machines even in headless
-> -> mode.
-> -> ->
-> -> -> You also want to make sure your Host OS is using a physically separate
-> -> -> Network Interface Card to the Virtual Machines.  When you start
-> -> sharing the
-> -> -> host NIC with the VM's it slows things down and potentially causes odd
-> -> -> Windows TCP Stack problems.
-> -> ->
-> -> -> When you have the server hardware in place you can then fine tune the
-> -> -> Settings for each of your VM's to reduce overhead and lag.
-> -> ->
-> -> -> I suggest you experiment as much as possible before moving everything
-> -> to a
-> -> -> production environment.
-> -> ->
-> -> -> Mike
-> ->
->
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