Continuing from here.
I used to have a Windows 7 VM. One of those free legal things you can get from Microsoft themselves and expire in 90 days - except they don't
(I don't have it anymore because I found ways to run the things I was running without Windows).
If I allocated 4G of RAM to it, it ran almost decently... except when it was off on a tangent doing hidden things by itself, which was like 70% of the time.
Then you basically couldn't do anything in it, and it went on for ages. CPU at 100%. But that's Windows.
In the rare intervals of less-than-100% CPUsage, I could use it to, basically, play poker . Which uses close to 0% CPU on Linux. And on Windows, I guess, but it's hard to tell, it's over 50% when idle...
I also use Virtualbox to test Linux distros.
Thing is, they run slow.
They run a lot better - on my system - on the USB stick than in the VM. And I always allocate 4G to the VMs, even though Virtualbox by default allocates far less.
I actually have an almost-full-blown Neon -on-a-stick - with a persistence file - which I use (very seldom) for... it's complicated
So I was wondering why VMs seem to run more slowly here than USB sticks...
It's a Quad core Intel Celeron J1900 min/max 1351/2415 MHz, 8G RAM, 500G SSD, Neon unstable.
I used to have a Windows 7 VM. One of those free legal things you can get from Microsoft themselves and expire in 90 days - except they don't
(I don't have it anymore because I found ways to run the things I was running without Windows).
If I allocated 4G of RAM to it, it ran almost decently... except when it was off on a tangent doing hidden things by itself, which was like 70% of the time.
Then you basically couldn't do anything in it, and it went on for ages. CPU at 100%. But that's Windows.
In the rare intervals of less-than-100% CPUsage, I could use it to, basically, play poker . Which uses close to 0% CPU on Linux. And on Windows, I guess, but it's hard to tell, it's over 50% when idle...
I also use Virtualbox to test Linux distros.
Thing is, they run slow.
They run a lot better - on my system - on the USB stick than in the VM. And I always allocate 4G to the VMs, even though Virtualbox by default allocates far less.
I actually have an almost-full-blown Neon -on-a-stick - with a persistence file - which I use (very seldom) for... it's complicated
So I was wondering why VMs seem to run more slowly here than USB sticks...
It's a Quad core Intel Celeron J1900 min/max 1351/2415 MHz, 8G RAM, 500G SSD, Neon unstable.
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