]> www.moka5.com - 3D Gaming demo in LivePC virtual machine - Comments http://www.moka5.com/node/789 Comments for "3D Gaming demo in LivePC virtual machine" en Those videos are great...BUT.... http://www.moka5.com/node/789#comment-1031 It's great to see that it works for 3D acceleration. I tried it with the PCLive library of Quake and is great.. BUT... How did u do it?? im trying to use other 3D games but it's not working and is getting frozen. It'd be great if u teach the way to do it. Im trying with Silkroad Online (www.silkroadonline.net) but it is displaying a pbloblem with Video. Thnx bye Mon, 02 Jul 2007 14:48:52 -0700 Bare-metal version http://www.moka5.com/node/789#comment-906 Hello Kelvin, Thanks for the reply. Honestly, I haven't used the bare-metal version in a few months. If you could make the 3D-Acceleration work in a Windows VM on the bare-metal edition, that would be something to get excited about. I have given up PC gaming altogether because I prefer Ubuntu as my host OS. As far as isolating the games (applications), <a href=http://juice.altiris.com/svs>Altiris SVS</a> does a pretty good job at this. Currently, you just need to install a small SVS client on the machine. Then, publishers could distribute the games as SVS packages that could be downloaded and "activated." Something to think about. Don't get me wrong, I love what you guys are doing. I would really love to see the bare-metal version mature a bit more. On demand Operating Systems on an appliance device? That would rock. -Harley Stagner <a href=http://www.harleystagner.com>http://www.harleystagner.com</a> Mon, 07 May 2007 09:20:21 -0700 Hi Harley, Thanks for the http://www.moka5.com/node/789#comment-897 Hi Harley, Thanks for the comment. To answer your question on why anyone would want to run a 3D game in a VM on an already capable physical machine. I can think of a few reasons: <ul> <li>A lot of the games are poorly written and I don't want them to pollute the installation on my physical machine. Also when the games crash (yes, they do crash!), they won't crash my physical machine. <li>Similar to the previous point. Some games are not compatible with the host installation. <li>This is a good way for game publishers to demo their games. Users don't need to install anything on their machine. Just start the LivePC and they can try out the games. </ul> Are you currently using our bare-metal version of the LivePC engine? Any comments or suggestions? Thanks, Kelvin Fri, 04 May 2007 10:56:13 -0700 Can this be accomplished on the baremetal edition? http://www.moka5.com/node/789#comment-893 I can see real value for Linux users who also happen to be gamers to finally rid themselves of a Windows Hardware machine. If this will eventually work on the baremetal edition then this is something really compelling. As it stands, why would I want to run a 3D game in a VM on an already capable physical machine (yes, I know you could carry your pc games with you, but who does that consistently)? Anyway, this looks really interesting and a step in the right direction. If this would work with Baremetal I would download it right away. -Harley Stagner http://www.harleystagner.com Thu, 03 May 2007 09:35:36 -0700 3D Gaming demo in LivePC virtual machine http://www.moka5.com/node/789 As you all know that we released Virtual Machine 3D Graphics Acceleration for preview a couple months back (see <a href="http://www.moka5.com/node/536">blog posting</a>). We have integrated the 3D Graphics support in our latest <a href="http://www.moka5.com/products/index.html">LivePC Engine</a> release and the <a href="http://www.moka5.com/products/index.html">moka5tools</a>. You can now play any games on your Windows XP LivePC. Here are a couple videos that show the games running inside the LivePC virtual machine: Thu, 26 Apr 2007 11:47:20 -0700