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Using Vida On Virtual Machine - Any Disadvantage?

Help, Advice, Owners' Discussion and DIY Tutorials on Volvo's stylish, distinctive P2 platform cars sold as model years 2001-2007 (North American market year designations).

2001 - 2007 V70
2001 - 2004 V70 XC (Cross Country)
2004 - 2007 XC70 (Cross Country)
2001 - 2009 S60
2003 - 2007 S60 R
2004 - 2007 V70 R

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Oka
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Using Vida On Virtual Machine - Any Disadvantage?

Post by Oka »

Connecting Volvo to Vida, through a virtual machine, what would be the disadvantage?
Cheeers
2001 Volvo XC70/AWD/Auto/Turbo/146kMiles
2001 Volvo V70XC/AWD/Auto/Turbo/144kMiles
2002 Subaru Outback L.L. Bean/3.0/131K/AWD
2005 Volvo XC90/AWD/V8/Auto 111 Miles
2006 Toyota Sienna LE/AWD 93K
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1985 BMW (E23) 735i(US)/AUTO/209K Miles (Parked since 2011)
1997 Mazda MPV/AUTO/4WD/173K Miles (Parked since 2008)

dikidera
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Post by dikidera »

Cumbersome. A VM is a resource hog. Works perfectly fine directly on actual hardware even Windows 11.

It's just a roundabout way to run VIDA. Like writing a GUI in visual basic to track the killer's IP.

velorider
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Post by velorider »

I run it in a VM on a Linux laptop no problem. Performance doesn't seem to be an issue. Previously, it was in a VM on a Mac, again no problems.

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Post by dikidera »

If your primary OS is not Windows then sure. But if it is, I see no reason to.

vtl
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Post by vtl »

dikidera wrote: 09 Jan 2024, 05:13 If your primary OS is not Windows then sure. But if it is, I see no reason to.
Who in 2024 has Windows as a primary OS? Why? What for?

In 2024 even nested virtualization (virtual machine in virtual machine on hypervisor) is not bad at all.

dikidera
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Post by dikidera »

It's been my primary OS since the early 2000s. I do occasionally use Linux and I am not a stranger to compiling kernels, I've done that quite a lot. But still Windows is my primary OS.

Oka
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Post by Oka »

Thanks every one for your replies and info, I really appreciate it all !

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matthew1  
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Post by matthew1 »

I had Vida on a VM (Mac, Intel) and Windows XP (yes this was over a decade ago) caught a virus. It was not salvageable via any reasonable amount of effort, so I nuked the whole thing with one button click. Poof. Problem solved. :lol:

I think then I cloned a sibling VM with a bare Windows install on it, installed Vida, and was back in business in just minutes of actual human time/effort.

If you think of VMs as disposable, this strategy can save time and headaches. But keep it just to Windows/Vida to make it easy to play to the strengths of this strategy. If you put lots of work/documents on the VM, and don't back it up, all the elegance and simplicity is absent, and you have all the traditional drawbacks of a physical PC you depend on.
Help keep MVS on the web -> click sponsors' links here on MVS when you buy from them.

Also -> Amazon link
. Click that when you go to buy something on Amazon and MVS gets a cut!

1998 V70, no dash lights on

1997 850 T5 [gone] w/ MSD ignition coil, Hallman manual boost controller, injectors, R bumper, OMP strut brace

2004 V70 R [gone]

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matthew1  
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Post by matthew1 »

But to answer your question directly -- no drawbacks, all the physical ports are "there", and have been since the 2000s. A VM with Windows will "see" peripherals just fine. That problem was solved long ago.
Help keep MVS on the web -> click sponsors' links here on MVS when you buy from them.

Also -> Amazon link
. Click that when you go to buy something on Amazon and MVS gets a cut!

1998 V70, no dash lights on

1997 850 T5 [gone] w/ MSD ignition coil, Hallman manual boost controller, injectors, R bumper, OMP strut brace

2004 V70 R [gone]

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Oka
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Post by Oka »

The laptop I am going to use will only be for VIDA (VirtualBox) and a car scanning software on host (Windows 10). Just those two only, nothing else.

Would anyone have a VIDA in a Windows 7 OVA or VDI file I can use?
Or, is there where I can download one?
Though the VirtualBox installed will be on Windows 10 Pro x64.

Cheers

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