Our Parallels Desktop and VMware Fusion shootout took a deep dive into the two most successful commercial virtualization products for the Mac, but many of you had questions about VirtualBox, the free ...
What a difference a year makes! When I first reviewed innotek’s VirtualBox, in version 1.3, I found a product with tremendous potential marred by some annoying stability and performance issues. Since ...
Oracle has announced the general availability of version 4.0 of the Oracle VM VirtualBox free open source virtualization platform. The announcement comes only three weeks after the company debuted the ...
Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology. Oracle's VM VirtualBox is a powerful, free, and open-source ...
I've used Virtual Box for years and I've yet to see a compelling reason to switch. I don't care for 3D and anyone who does should not be running a VM anyway. Virtual Box has been 100% stable for me ...
Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology. Oracle's VM VirtualBox is a powerful, free, and open-source ...
The full version of VirtualBox is released under an unusual licence that permits ongoing use at no charge providing it is installed by the actual user. Corporate users are expected to buy licences. A ...
Oracle has announced Oracle VM VirtualBox 4.1. The latest release provides capabilities to increase the usability and flexibility of the product by introducing a new virtual machine cloning facility, ...
Innotek on Tuesday announced the release of the first public beta version of VirtualBox for Mac OS X, another virtualization environment for Intel-based Macs, this time based on open source code.
Oracle VM VirtualBox is the most advanced free desktop-based virtualization utility and the most advanced open-source version virtualization software, too. It's not the best or easiest-to-use ...
These open-source apps fix everyday Windows annoyances so well, it’s baffling Microsoft hasn’t built them in yet.