Di, some of us have bigger issues because we use more stuff. For me it’s the lack of clarity around HP drivers for our Officejet multi function machines. I’ve just finally fixed the printheads but the scanning from a PC is entirely down to the driver suite and if HP don’t have a full driver suite, then we lose that functionality. Which is not good.
I was talking Mrs S through scanning documents for email from her W7 Laptop, using network scanning over the wifi, just yesterday. So it’s a function I don’t want to lose.
Of course I can just use a Windows 7 VM on my desktop but that is not quite an option for Mrs S…
WM, the issue with apps and x64 is mainly 16 bit apps. Certainly anything with a custom user interface instead of using commonUI from Microsoft could be an issue, however I’m running an old version of Works and an old version of Organizer on Mrs S x64 laptop (both 32 bit apps). 16 Bit, of course, won’t run at all.
Ossie, there are more options than the recommended one’s. I prefer a full VM myself so I use different VM’s for different purposes and my main one is VMWare but that is paid and expensive.
For you Oracle’s excellent (and free),
Virtual Box would do. Also Microsoft’s
Virtual PC (also free), is probably the most compatible with older versions of windows with drivers that support them. Especially Windows 3.1/3.11.
You could also, because of the tiny size of them, create dos machines with an autoexec.bat which simply ran one game and have one virtual machine for each game…. This is for DOS games. For Windows games you could have Windows95/98 or XP for your older games.
Somewhere, lying around, I have networking drivers for DOS which I used to use for booting and installing new hardware when CD drives were £600 a go and, therefore, like rocking horse shite on the Moon. It’s clunky but works, it also allows Windows 3.1 to access the network. You can, of course, just create a virtual drive (in windows a VHD), attach it in windows then copy DOS, Windows, Install and games files to it and do the install on the VM once it has booted it. But that is a tutorial that is online or I can walk you through it. It is not difficult, just not a right click away.
If you think it’s worth doing to get rid of the old PC’s let me and WM know and we can talk you through the process. You can also probably just image the old machines and boot them up straight to a VM. Certainly in VirtualPC that is more likely to work.
Just some thoughts. Personally my Laptop is currently Windows 8.1 but my key VM’s are W10 which is causing me a lot of pain with VMWare workstation crashing with CPU issues. I’m hoping that the latest update has fixed that.
Just a few thoughts for those of us who can’t just junp to the next OS right away, or ever….