Alternatives for Utilizing Mint AND Windows
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Alternatives for Utilizing Mint AND Windows
So, I have been using Mint (Gloria x64) for a few months and absolutely love it. I installed it on my desktop and can dual-boot either Mint of Vista Home Premium. I definitely prefer to use Mint for pretty much everything.
BUT, here's my problem. I also own a PS3, and am amazed at the ability to stream Netflix and Hulu (along with a few other cats and dogs) to the PS3 with a media server (called Play On, which is a Windows-only program). So to do this I have to be booted into my Vista OS. This makes it inconvenient to use Mint because I have to reboot every time. Or it becomes inconvenient to stream Netflix or Hulu to the PS3 because I need to go to my desktop and reboot every time.
I'm looking for some ideas on how best to solve this problem.....
1) Install Mint using Mint4Win instead of dual-booting. How does this affect performance and security (I'm still in Windows....)?
2) Install XP or Vista in Mint as a Virtual machine using VirtualBox. I like this idea, but my main concern with this option is performance. I have 4GB RAM, and this Play On program has a min. requirement of 1GB, so I should be able to allot 2GB to the virtual machine and be OK. But I'm still a little worried that I won't be able to stream high quality video this way. I guess I won't know for sure until I try it.
3) Build a cheap machine with Windows and use it pretty much exclusively as a media server. I'm not sure this is really worth it. I really do like Mint and everything, but it's awesomeness may not be enough to make me want to either give away PS3 streaming or pay a few hundred bucks
I have a Vista and an XP license just laying around, so that's not a concern. I'm just not sure what the most prudent course of action is at this point. I am definitely not an expert in understanding the nuances of how a virtual machine works (or how Mint4Win works). Any ideas on how you might address the problem?
Thanks in advance!
BUT, here's my problem. I also own a PS3, and am amazed at the ability to stream Netflix and Hulu (along with a few other cats and dogs) to the PS3 with a media server (called Play On, which is a Windows-only program). So to do this I have to be booted into my Vista OS. This makes it inconvenient to use Mint because I have to reboot every time. Or it becomes inconvenient to stream Netflix or Hulu to the PS3 because I need to go to my desktop and reboot every time.
I'm looking for some ideas on how best to solve this problem.....
1) Install Mint using Mint4Win instead of dual-booting. How does this affect performance and security (I'm still in Windows....)?
2) Install XP or Vista in Mint as a Virtual machine using VirtualBox. I like this idea, but my main concern with this option is performance. I have 4GB RAM, and this Play On program has a min. requirement of 1GB, so I should be able to allot 2GB to the virtual machine and be OK. But I'm still a little worried that I won't be able to stream high quality video this way. I guess I won't know for sure until I try it.
3) Build a cheap machine with Windows and use it pretty much exclusively as a media server. I'm not sure this is really worth it. I really do like Mint and everything, but it's awesomeness may not be enough to make me want to either give away PS3 streaming or pay a few hundred bucks
I have a Vista and an XP license just laying around, so that's not a concern. I'm just not sure what the most prudent course of action is at this point. I am definitely not an expert in understanding the nuances of how a virtual machine works (or how Mint4Win works). Any ideas on how you might address the problem?
Thanks in advance!
Last edited by LockBot on Wed Dec 28, 2022 7:16 am, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
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Re: Alternatives for Utilizing Mint AND Windows
Hi mcash,
1) Mint4Win is not Mint running in Windows, as I think you believe. It is just Mint installed on the Windows partition, and the Windows bootloader modified to allow booting to Mint as well (rather than installing GRUB). You'll still need to reboot to load Mint or Windows.
2) I considered having a virtual Windows myself; I have a gig of RAM total and doing what you describe works perfectly fine with such a small amount of RAM. However, I had issues getting VirtualBox to detect my USB ports - I don't know if this is a widespread problem or not as I never really bothered trying to fix it!
The main reason for my not bothering with virtualisation is the following: I think you'd be better of downloading Wine (www.winehq.org) - download the .deb installer directly from http://wine.budgetdedicated.com/archive/index.html . Wine is not an emulator, nor a virtualiser. Instead, it installs key Windows files to your Linux installation, and allows Windows programs to run by pointing them to the Windows files. Wine is about 70 meg when installed, so it's no where near as big as a full Windows installation, and there is no dual-boot or separate partitions, etc. It's fuss-free and easy to use.
Failing that, there may be a program available in the Synaptic repo's?
3) Don't waste money on Windows. lol.
1) Mint4Win is not Mint running in Windows, as I think you believe. It is just Mint installed on the Windows partition, and the Windows bootloader modified to allow booting to Mint as well (rather than installing GRUB). You'll still need to reboot to load Mint or Windows.
2) I considered having a virtual Windows myself; I have a gig of RAM total and doing what you describe works perfectly fine with such a small amount of RAM. However, I had issues getting VirtualBox to detect my USB ports - I don't know if this is a widespread problem or not as I never really bothered trying to fix it!
The main reason for my not bothering with virtualisation is the following: I think you'd be better of downloading Wine (www.winehq.org) - download the .deb installer directly from http://wine.budgetdedicated.com/archive/index.html . Wine is not an emulator, nor a virtualiser. Instead, it installs key Windows files to your Linux installation, and allows Windows programs to run by pointing them to the Windows files. Wine is about 70 meg when installed, so it's no where near as big as a full Windows installation, and there is no dual-boot or separate partitions, etc. It's fuss-free and easy to use.
Failing that, there may be a program available in the Synaptic repo's?
3) Don't waste money on Windows. lol.
Thanks beyecixramd!
Husse wrote:Actually I've never broken a Linux I have managed to install - but there are a few I never managed to install
Re: Alternatives for Utilizing Mint AND Windows
Honestly, I was going to suggest Wine also.
Give it a shot. Probably the simplest solution.
Give it a shot. Probably the simplest solution.
Re: Alternatives for Utilizing Mint AND Windows
Try the PlayOnLinux deb :-
http://www.playonlinux.com/en/download.html
or the HowTo - over on the Ultimate site :-
http://forumubuntusoftware.info/viewtop ... =13&t=3886
http://www.playonlinux.com/en/download.html
or the HowTo - over on the Ultimate site :-
http://forumubuntusoftware.info/viewtop ... =13&t=3886
Please edit your original post title to include [SOLVED] - when your problem is solved!
and DO LOOK at those Unanswered Topics - - you may be able to answer some!.
Re: Alternatives for Utilizing Mint AND Windows
Thanks David. You're right, I had a misperception of Mint4Win. The real capability of Mint4Win doesn't help me at allDavid Hunter wrote:Hi mcash,
1) Mint4Win is not Mint running in Windows, as I think you believe. It is just Mint installed on the Windows partition, and the Windows bootloader modified to allow booting to Mint as well (rather than installing GRUB). You'll still need to reboot to load Mint or Windows.
I can verify that the VirtualBox option just doesn't cut the mustard. It was quite a task, given my own low level of expertise, but I did manage to get an XP SP2 VB set up, and installed Play On. I even managed to stream the video to my PS3, but the performance of the virtual machine was just too crappy to make it work. I toyed around with adjusting how much RAM I allocated to the host and guest, but it was always jittery no matter what I tried.David Hunter wrote:2) I considered having a virtual Windows myself; I have a gig of RAM total and doing what you describe works perfectly fine with such a small amount of RAM. However, I had issues getting VirtualBox to detect my USB ports - I don't know if this is a widespread problem or not as I never really bothered trying to fix it!
The main reason for my not bothering with virtualisation is the following: I think you'd be better of downloading Wine (http://www.winehq.org) - download the .deb installer directly from http://wine.budgetdedicated.com/archive/index.html . Wine is not an emulator, nor a virtualiser. Instead, it installs key Windows files to your Linux installation, and allows Windows programs to run by pointing them to the Windows files. Wine is about 70 meg when installed, so it's no where near as big as a full Windows installation, and there is no dual-boot or separate partitions, etc. It's fuss-free and easy to use.
Failing that, there may be a program available in the Synaptic repo's?
3) Don't waste money on Windows. lol.
I am going to try the Wine option, hopefully tonight, and if that doesn't solve it I'll look more into this PlayOnLinux thing Pierre mentioned.
Re: Alternatives for Utilizing Mint AND Windows
Well, I regret to inform you that I have failed in my attempts to utilize WINE to run the Play On Media Server.
PlayOn requires Microsoft .NET 2, which WINE does not support. I did go through the exercise of running winetricks and selecting dotnet20 (though the WINE website says very few programs work doing this), but having done that the PlayOn installer fails and says that my operating system is not Windows 2000, Windows XP, or Windows Vista.
The PlayOnLinux program uses WINE as its core, so I have to assume it is going to have the same problems, correct?
I may just have to chalk this one up in the loss column. Worse things have happened.....
(But if there are other plausible solutions out there, I'd love to hear about them!)
PlayOn requires Microsoft .NET 2, which WINE does not support. I did go through the exercise of running winetricks and selecting dotnet20 (though the WINE website says very few programs work doing this), but having done that the PlayOn installer fails and says that my operating system is not Windows 2000, Windows XP, or Windows Vista.
The PlayOnLinux program uses WINE as its core, so I have to assume it is going to have the same problems, correct?
I may just have to chalk this one up in the loss column. Worse things have happened.....
(But if there are other plausible solutions out there, I'd love to hear about them!)
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Re: Alternatives for Utilizing Mint AND Windows
I'd give PlayOnLinux a go, at least. Nothing to lose, right?
Let us know how you get on.
Let us know how you get on.
Thanks beyecixramd!
Husse wrote:Actually I've never broken a Linux I have managed to install - but there are a few I never managed to install
Re: Alternatives for Utilizing Mint AND Windows
You DO have to have M$IE 7 installed, to "make it work".Play on Linux included in this distro, which allows playing of windows games in a nearly seamless manner.
Please edit your original post title to include [SOLVED] - when your problem is solved!
and DO LOOK at those Unanswered Topics - - you may be able to answer some!.
Re: Alternatives for Utilizing Mint AND Windows
Yeah, the PlayOn media server has some extreme dependencies on Microsoft / Windows 'stuff'. It is just out of my league.Pierre wrote:You DO have to have M$IE 7 installed, to "make it work".Play on Linux included in this distro, which allows playing of windows games in a nearly seamless manner.
Here's a thread on the PlayOn site about the same topic. They also came to the same conclusion - no dice.
Re: Alternatives for Utilizing Mint AND Windows
The PoL install did go ok, - but in the process ALL of the updates, some like OOO, which I don't keep really up-to-date,
the kernel & stuff were all updated - some 150Mb.
The NET framework, Direct X 9c , etc another 150Mb, so its a big download just to get M$IE working.
I haven't tried any games or S/w as yet. will later, though.
Does look like a nicer front-end for Wine, though.
Under wine itself, no installed stuff appears, only under PoL.
EDIT: I don't have most of the games that are listed, so I can't test them.
the odd disk that I ran, installed ok, but the game wouldn't run. more of a wine issue, I think.
I'd say, that those that have had a script made for them should work better.
the kernel & stuff were all updated - some 150Mb.
The NET framework, Direct X 9c , etc another 150Mb, so its a big download just to get M$IE working.
I haven't tried any games or S/w as yet. will later, though.
Does look like a nicer front-end for Wine, though.
Under wine itself, no installed stuff appears, only under PoL.
EDIT: I don't have most of the games that are listed, so I can't test them.
the odd disk that I ran, installed ok, but the game wouldn't run. more of a wine issue, I think.
I'd say, that those that have had a script made for them should work better.
Please edit your original post title to include [SOLVED] - when your problem is solved!
and DO LOOK at those Unanswered Topics - - you may be able to answer some!.
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Re: Alternatives for Utilizing Mint AND Windows
What version of Wine are you using? If it's the one from the package manager (v1.0.0), it's way out of date.
The current stable version is 1.1.31 and the beta release 1.1.32 I installed last night and have had no issues with games since updating. I was once stuck on the v.1.0.0 package before realizing it was out of date!
Glad to hear POL is at least working... despite the huge MS download needed.
The current stable version is 1.1.31 and the beta release 1.1.32 I installed last night and have had no issues with games since updating. I was once stuck on the v.1.0.0 package before realizing it was out of date!
Glad to hear POL is at least working... despite the huge MS download needed.
Thanks beyecixramd!
Husse wrote:Actually I've never broken a Linux I have managed to install - but there are a few I never managed to install
Re: Alternatives for Utilizing Mint AND Windows
I got lazy
I used this issue as an excuse to see how little I could spend and use the components I have laying around here to build a machine to act as nothing more than a media server. Right now I'm at $110, but that includes $15 to get a Vista recovery CD from Hewlett-Packard (who sold me a really horrible laptop that burnt up shortly after its warranty expired). This could free me from my dual-boot requirement on my desktop system, but I don't have the MB/CPU I ordered yet, so that's just speculation for now....
I used this issue as an excuse to see how little I could spend and use the components I have laying around here to build a machine to act as nothing more than a media server. Right now I'm at $110, but that includes $15 to get a Vista recovery CD from Hewlett-Packard (who sold me a really horrible laptop that burnt up shortly after its warranty expired). This could free me from my dual-boot requirement on my desktop system, but I don't have the MB/CPU I ordered yet, so that's just speculation for now....