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    <title>What did you learn today? - Virtual PC</title>
    <link>http://blog.philknows.net/</link>
    <description>Phil Denoncourt's Technology Rants</description>
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    <copyright>Phil Denoncourt III</copyright>
    <lastBuildDate>Thu, 17 Nov 2005 21:08:47 GMT</lastBuildDate>
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        <font size="3">I've been using Virtual
PC for over a year now for a variety of different purposes: running beta software,
running Linux, testing installs and creating a machine to use for telecommuting. Just
last night I helped a coworker on a problem with Windows Server 2003. Instead of having
to keep a dual boot machine, I was able to walk through and test various scenarios
using my virtual PC image.<br /><br />
Over the past three months or so, the performance has just sucked. To the point where
it took two hours to download updates from WindowsUpdate. It didn't used to be that
slow, in fact it was almost as fast as my host PC, so I starting checking things out,
trying to find the problem. 
<br /><br />
Turns out the problem was Windows XP Service Pack 2. With Service Pack 2, there was
a change that caused virtual machines to run very very very slowly. The recommended
solution was to install service pack 1 for Virtual PC. That helped, but things were
still pretty slow. The other part of the solution is to uninstall the virtual machine
additions and then reinstall them on all your client images. This reduces the amount
of thrashing for virtual XP Sp2 machines. This was all information that was contained
in the readme file for Service Pack 1. Sometimes it pays to read the Readme files.</font>
        <br />
        <br />
        <cite>
          <font size="3">SP1 includes the following additional software updates.</font>
          <br />
          <li>
            <font size="3">Updated version of Virtual Machine Additions. You should update the
version of Virtual Machine Additions on all virtual machines where Virtual Machine
Additions is installed. For more information, see "Installing Virtual Machine Additions"
in Virtual PC Help. </font>
          </li>
        </cite>
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      <title>Virtual PC Performance</title>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 17 Nov 2005 21:08:47 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;font size=3&gt;I've been using Virtual PC for over a year now for a variety of different
purposes: running beta software, running Linux, testing installs and creating a machine
to use for telecommuting. Just last night I helped a coworker on a problem with Windows
Server 2003. Instead of having to keep a dual boot machine, I was able to walk through
and test various scenarios using my virtual PC image.&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
Over the past three months or so, the performance has just sucked. To the point where
it took two hours to download updates from WindowsUpdate. It didn't used to be that
slow, in fact it was almost as fast as my host PC, so I starting checking things out,
trying to find the problem. 
&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
Turns out the problem was Windows XP Service Pack 2. With Service Pack 2, there was
a change that caused virtual machines to run very very very slowly. The recommended
solution was to install service pack 1 for Virtual PC. That helped, but things were
still pretty slow. The other part of the solution is to uninstall the virtual machine
additions and then reinstall them on all your client images. This reduces the amount
of thrashing for virtual XP Sp2 machines. This was all information that was contained
in the readme file for Service Pack 1. Sometimes it pays to read the Readme files.&lt;/font&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
&lt;cite&gt;&lt;font size=3&gt;SP1 includes the following additional software updates.&lt;/font&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
&lt;li&gt;
&lt;font size=3&gt;Updated version of Virtual Machine Additions. You should update the version
of Virtual Machine Additions on all virtual machines where Virtual Machine Additions
is installed. For more information, see "Installing Virtual Machine Additions" in
Virtual PC Help. &lt;/font&gt;
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      <category>Virtual PC</category>
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