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The problem is that Microsoft's draconian licensing doesn't play well in virtual machines, especially when you're changing the configuration. Another place it falls down is training. I'd like to keep a catalog of images that I can load 30 copies for two days and then get rid of. I need to have them loaded and tested months ahead of time. That's hard to do with XP, piece of cake with 2000. And remember, these training stations are Windows machines that already have valid licenses - I just want to run the software in a VM to avoid conflicts.Both XP and Windows 2000 (the latter is the leanest plus it does not have validation issues when you do stuff with your virtual machine).
Windows 2000??? WHY???? Anyone that runs 8+ year old Oss has no right to complain about the OS.
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