We've shown you how to go about installing the new Windows 8 developer preview on a brand-new hard drive or a partition of your existing hard drive--that's easy.
However, most of you probably just want to check out Windows 8
without making a commitment to installing the OS on its own separate
drive (or drive portion). No problem! You can still fiddle with the new
OS in an environment that's much easier to remove once tinkering time
ends, thanks to the power of virtual machines--applications that let you
run a virtual PC inside your PC (cue Inception music).
Go grab VirtualBox
and install the default package. Once you're finished, you'll open
right into a fresh copy of the application. This is where you'll begin
creating your system inside your system.
To start, click on the giant New button in the upper-left
corner of the app. Give your virtual machine a clever name and select
Windows 7 as the operating system. Make sure that your choice of OS
(32-bit or 64-bit) matches whichever version of Windows 8 you
downloaded.
Click Next, and you'll be taken to a screen that asks how
much memory you'd like to devote to the virtual operating system. The
32-bit version of Windows 8 requires 1 gigabyte at minimum, and the
64-bit version requires 2GB, but the more RAM you can give the virtual
OS, the better it will run. Click Next once you've made your choice.
Leave the "Virtual Hard Disk" options and subsequent "Create New
Virtual Disk" options exactly as they are, unless you think you'll need
to access your virtual hard drive in a separate virtual machine
application. You can select either a "Dynamically allocated" or "Fixed
size" virtual hard drive based on your personal preferences--we suggest
you use the "Dynamically allocated" disk on our installation. On the
next screen, make sure that your virtual disk has at least 16GB
allocated to it for the 32-bit version of Windows 8. The 64-bit version
needs a minimum of 20GB.
Once you're ready, click Next to create your virtual machine.
When your new virtual PC is ready, it will appear in VirtualBox's
list of available machines (powered off at the moment, we note).
Highlight it and click the big Settings button. If your system
supports hardware virtualization, you can give your virtual machine
access to additional CPU cores via the System submenu. If you don't know
whether your CPU supports hardware virtualization, you can check for
yourself on Intel
and AMD's websites. For Intel processors, look up your own processor
model and check for virtualization under "Advanced Features." For AMD
processors, look up your processor model and look for a feature listing
called "AMD Virtualization Technology."
Now click on the Storage submenu and then on the Empty line underneath "IDE Controller." Click on the little CD icon next to the CD/DVD drive listing, and select the option, Choose a virtual CD/DVD disk file.
Scroll for the Windows 8 .iso file you previously downloaded to your
actual (not virtual) system and load that up. Now click on the big OK button at the bottom of the overall Settings window.
Cross your fingers and click on the big Start button to load
your virtual machine for the first time. If all has gone well, the
first thing you'll see is an annoying pop-up message that tells you
about your keyboard and mouse capturing options. Ignore it. VirtualBox
will boot and go right into the Windows 8 installation mechanism. Now
take a breath: You've made it past the tricky part. And before you know
it, you'll be fiddling around in Windows 8's funky new user interface
faster than you can say, "Virtualwho?"
Sources of : http://www.pcworld.com
Saturday, September 8, 2012
How to Download and Install Windows 8 Into a Virtual Machine
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