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A hardware emulator is an emulator which takes the form of a hardware device. Examples include the DOS-compatible card installed in some 1990s-era Macintosh computers, such as the Centris 610 or Performa 630, that allowed them to run personal computer (PC) software programs and field-programmable gate array-based hardware emulators.
VMware vSphere Hypervisor (ESXi 4.1) [42] 160 logical cores 1 TB 2 TB minus 512 bytes 320 8 255 GB 4 IDE; 60 SCSI 2 TB minus 512 bytes VMware vSphere Hypervisor (ESXi 5.0) [43] 160 logical cores 2 TB 64 TB 512 32 1 TB 4 IDE; 60 SCSI 2 TB minus 512 bytes VMware vSphere Hypervisor (ESXi 5.5) (free) [44] 16 NUMA Nodes / 320 logical CPUs 4 TB
PCTask is a software PC emulator emulating PC Intel hardware with 8088 processor and CGA graphic modes. The latest version of it (4.4) was capable to emulate an 80386 clocked at 12 MHz and features include support for up to 16 MiB RAM (15 MB extended) under MS-DOS, up to two floppy drives and 2 hard drives. The emulator could make use of ...
The PC must have at least 4 GB of RAM, 8 GB recommended, an x86-64 CPU and a GPU supporting one of the supported graphics APIs: OpenGL 4.3 or greater, or Vulkan, the latter being recommended. Additional support for SIMD CPU instruction sets such as AVX-2 and AVX-512 is also recommended for best performance.
Emulator Latest version Released Guest emulation capabilities Host Operating System License Bochs: 2.8 March 10, 2024: x86 PC, x86-64 PC: Cross-platform: Open source
2 GB RAM or more [8] Graphics hardware: Pixel Shader 3.0, and Direct3D 10 or OpenGL 3 support [16] Modern Direct3D 11.1, OpenGL 4.4, or Vulkan GPU [8] Input device(s) Any PC input device – mouse and keyboard by default for Wii, mouse by default for GameCube: Original Nintendo GameCube controller with USB adapter [19]
MAME (formerly an acronym of Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator) is a free and open-source emulator designed to recreate the hardware of arcade games, video game consoles, old computers and other systems in software on modern personal computers and other platforms. [1]
The first publicly available version of EMS, version 3.0 allowed access of up to 4 MiB of expanded memory. [citation needed] This was increased to 8 MiB with version 3.2 of the specification. The final version of EMS, version 4.0 increased the maximum amount of expanded memory to 32 MiB and supported additional functionality.