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Cameyo is an application virtualization product. [2] [3] It aims to virtualize Windows applications so that they can run on other machines or in HTML5 browsers. [4]It is reported to be easy to use, light in weight, and compatible with a wide variety of applications. [5]
Software keyboard (virtual) for entering any keys to a guest; Guest CPU use monitoring; Dropped support for software CPU virtualization: a CPU with hardware virtualization support is now required; Dropped support for PCI pass-through for Linux hosts; 7.0 Oct 10, 2022: Support for Windows 11 guest: UEFI Secure Boot and emulation of TPM 1.2 and 2 ...
Virtuhammer is used to port Linux distributions and the Windows kernel to x86-64 well before the first x86-64 processor was available in April 2003. June, Connectix launches its first version of Virtual PC for Windows. July, VMware creates the first x86 server virtualization product.
Virtual Iron 3.1 Virtual Iron Software, Inc., acquired by Oracle x86 VT-x, x86-64 AMD-V x86, x86-64 No host OS Windows, Linux Proprietary, some components GPLv2 [10] Virtual Machine Manager: Red Hat: x86, x86-64 x86, x86-64 Linux Linux, Windows GPL version 2 Virtual PC 2007 (discontinued) Connectix and Microsoft: x86, x86-64 x86
Hyper-V is a native hypervisor developed by Microsoft; it can create virtual machines on x86-64 systems running Windows. [1] It is included in Pro and Enterprise editions of Windows NT (since Windows 8) as an optional feature to be manually enabled. [2]
VMware ThinApp (formerly Thinstall) is an application virtualization and portable application creator suite by VMware that can package conventional Windows applications [3] into portable applications capable of running on another operating system. According to VMware, the product has a success rate of about 90–95% in packaging applications.
In 2008, Symantec acquired AppStream to incorporate the streaming of virtual applications. [1] According to a quote from DABCC.com, this will "deliver virtualized, on-demand application delivery and management". [2] Previous names for SWV are the before-mentioned SVS and Software Virtualization Professional.
Blue Pill originally required AMD-V (Pacifica) virtualization support, but was later ported to support Intel VT-x (Vanderpool) as well. It was designed by Joanna Rutkowska and originally demonstrated at the Black Hat Briefings on August 3, 2006, with a reference implementation for the Microsoft Windows Vista kernel.