![]() This means being restricted to XP 32-bit, which is too limiting right now which is one reason I go with VM Player which supports 64 bit guest OSs, and multi-core support. I would just make the clean OS in the same way I mentioned before. Windows 7 also comes with XP Mode which essentially means you get Windows XP in a VM for free. Getting major updates can be a bit of a pain, but I just try to keep whatever VM I'm using frequently up to date. Each VM is then using the same site license of Windows, and each is already activated. When I have a new project I'll make a new VM using that clean OS I backed up. In each VM I'll install the one version of LabVIEW, along with the appropriate drivers and libraries for that project. Then I'll make multiple VMs using a copy of my clean OS multiple times. LabVIEW 8. Then I'll shutdown the VM and copy away the virtual hard drive as a clean OS. LabVIEW 8.6 continues to make FPGAs more accessible to domain experts without experience in low-level hardware description languages or board-level design. ![]() Then I setup my VM the way I like with various utilities. Then I activate Windows the normal way, if it didn't do it automatically. When making a new VM you provide the ISO and Windows license and it will do the rest. So for me I'll make a new VM (right now I prefer VM Player). So my company has site licensing for Windows products.
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