I've used Virtualbox for small stuff but if you already have W10 perhaps you should just add the Hyper-V role. Hyper-V is a bit different in as much as you need to create a virtual switch to connect your VM to where something like Virtualbox and VMWare let you choose between a set of networking options although I seem to bridge most of my virtual machines.
I don't tend to do much with virtual machines these days. I've been playing around with Docker and now just about everything goes into a container. It's so much nicer than having a VM farm. W2016 and W10 have kernel support for Docker but can't run Linux containers (obviously). There are a growing number of Windows containers though. Sorry I rambled. I do that when I'm hungry. On 23/04/17 18:48, Ian Bruntlett wrote: > Hi Denny, > > On 23 April 2017 at 18:41, Denny <dennis.f...@gmail.com > <mailto:dennis.f...@gmail.com>> wrote: > > If you just want to test Lubuntu why don't you run it in a VM? > IMO, if you aren't ready to ditch W10 that is your better option. > You can always dual boot later after you've tested. > > Never installed an O.S. on a VM. Where should I look for initial > information? > > Thanks, > > > Ian > > -- > -- ACCU - Professionalism in programming - http://www.accu.org > -- My writing - https://sites.google.com/site/ianbruntlett/ > -- Free Software page - > https://sites.google.com/site/ianbruntlett/home/free-software > > >
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