On Tue, Jun 9, 2009 at 4:44 AM, James Parsonpar...@hood.edu wrote:
Here's a really dumb thing you could do.
(1) Make a copy of sage-vmware-* to another directory.
(2) Run both vmware's at the same time.
That'll definitely use both cores on your computer.
Indeed! That's what I ended up
You might have to use vmware workstation in order to configure the
virtual machine to use more than 1 core:
http://www.vmware.com/products/ws/
It costs money, but there is an easy 1-month free trial. You could try
that in order to tell whether multiple cores will work with the
virtual
2009/6/8 James Parson par...@hood.edu:
You might have to use vmware workstation in order to configure the
virtual machine to use more than 1 core:
http://www.vmware.com/products/ws/
It costs money, but there is an easy 1-month free trial. You could try
that in order to tell whether
Here's a really dumb thing you could do.
(1) Make a copy of sage-vmware-* to another directory.
(2) Run both vmware's at the same time.
That'll definitely use both cores on your computer.
Indeed! That's what I ended up doing this afternoon. I had VMWare
Workstation make a clone of my
On Thu, Jun 4, 2009 at 11:49 AM, James Parson par...@hood.edu wrote:
Dear sage-support group,
Is it possible to have Sage use multiple cores when running it under
VMWare Player? I have a quad-core machine running Sage via the VMWare
player in Windows XP, and I have not been able to figure