I am using VM's for a very long time, VMware and HyperV solely, and it takes some time to understand the pitfalls and laws. YOu have to acquire the knowldge yourself or better install DCS-SRV on real hardware and wait with VM's until you are more into it. There is no step-by-step guide for this, you expect it to be that simple ? It is not tbh. It is the Swiss Army knife among all those and highly compatible ( that's what you pay for ) with other I would test VMware Workstation for a month and then maybe buy it if you like it. If you are new to Linux, it may not be adviseable to do it that way, unless you are here for a wild ride, console typing and lots of reading. Play with each one, VMware has a demo ( VMware Workstation is what you want ), others need the correct OS ( Linux ) installed first. ![]() VirtualBox: Only played with it some years ago. XEN: Linux Kernel VM: Never used it tbh, it does make perfect sense in DC's and dense areas. VMware: not free, easiest to use, oldest dog around, my preferred personal solution as it runs on all OS I use, any VM runs on any Host. ![]() Google if it allows Dx11, i think it does meanwhile HyperV: Microsoft VM, included with any 10 Pro iirc. Rather count a few more weeks and lots of trial & error. It is not super complicated, but it wont happen in a day, maybe 2-3 weeks if you really stick to it. This is anything but trivial if you havent worked with it at all. YOu will need to know the basics of linux, which is quite a lot, you should know the basics about virtualization and the specialties of your choosen VM solution. I highly assume you will have a steep learning curve if you go that route. I am not sure if this is the right approach for you if Gnome is unknown to you. ![]() Gnome is one of the many Desktops you can use in Linux.
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