I use Virtualbox in my daytime job laptop. I was told to "not to touch the partitions", so I boot from a USB HD in Linux and run the laptop inside virtualbox. If need be, I can shut down, unplug the USB and boot the laptop bare metal in the same box I run it virtual. Cool'stuff... :) ET Mark Phillips writes: > I have managed to fill up my laptop's dual boot (Win 7 and Debian testing) > 320 GB drive, so I have a new shiny 750 GB drive to install. I have tried > to use Clonezilla, and it keeps failing because the old drive has 512 byte > sectors and the new drive has 4096 byte sectors. No problem; I will just > create a system image of the Windows partitions to move that to the new > drive, net install Debian testing, and copy over my user files. > > However, I was thinking that I could get rid of the dual boot and just > virtualize the Windows partition. My questions - > > 1. Can I create a virtual version of my Windows 7 Home Premium using the > system recovery disk and the backup on my external usb drive? So far, it > installs to the new 750 GB drive with no issues. I don't have any original > media disks. > > 2. Vmware or Virtualbox? Do either one support usb so I can run iTunes on > my virtual Windows drive? A while ago I was able to get vmware to run off > of the Windows disk partition, but it seemed to break every time I ran an > upgrade on Debian, and it was a pain to get it to work each time. I don't > want to fiddle with this approach again, unless I have to. > > Thanks for your suggestions! > > Mark --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss