
The thing is, in my case, it has never been fixed and many other members in this forum had experienced the same issue. See, this issue about File Explorer's search box has been there since before version 18932 and seemed to have been fixed when the latter came out:įor reference, see the section: General Changes, Improvements, and Fixes for PC from this link Q: to run VMWare / VBox, do I need to have the Hyper-V components enabled in WinX? I already have the BIOS settings enabled for correct VM use, but I wasn't sure (and wanted to avoid the johngalt,

However, yours and Jimbo's success with either VMware or VBox have gotten me interested in possibly using one of those third party solutions to start running a couple of VMs again, including one for testing WinX WS. Question about the survey - why are they asking if one has installed a build - presumably they know unless you have disabled Telemetry.Yeah, I gave up on Hyper-V last year after it simply had too many problems. Many possibilities here - but not tonight. If I can get a stable OS I may finally do away with my XFS RAID 0 and use ReFS to create a RAID 0. People do know about the MULTI ISO from UUPDUMP I guess.

Too many hassles compared to VMware (or Virtualbox for that matter, which despite advesung, will install but not creater VMs in parellel with Hyper-v. I can no longer create shortcuts on the visible nor delete objects on it. Somehow my visible desktop got combined with the Desktop folder on OneDrive. I'm constantly cloning VM's, reverting to specific snapshots, installing new VM's, and I've not had to set foot in the server room (where my host machine is) in around two months.I will need to re-install Windows 10 for Workstations Build 18956. I'm using the above practices to manage virtual test machines for my QA effort. There are some good reasons for why the mouse works the way it does (because it's basically wrapped in a few layers of remoting.) and this was covered by a blog article by one of the MS virtualizations guys (Ben armstrong? John Howard?)Īlso search for and lay your hands on a really handy sidebar gaget called "Hyper-V Monitor", which provides a great way to do some basic vm management functions (and connect to VM consoles!) all from the vista sidebar. Use RD to the host system only when you need to do things like move files around, or other functions that are not easily facilitated via remote management UI's or other MMC controls.ĭo 95% or more of your VM management from HVM running on the workstation.

1) use a VISTA system as your 'management workstation'Ģ) make sure the HyperV server is setup to allow remote managementģ) Install the Hyper-V Manager on your workstationĤ) use HVM from the workstation to create the virtual machine, connect to a console session (on your work station) export, import, snapshot, etc your VM's
