Kepp in mind, we Mac users typically run VPC because we HAVE to, not because we want to. Additionally, those apps tend to be for users that actually make money with them, therefore they can easily justify the expense of buying a real Mac. But you're not going to want to emulate those things. Yes, there are really compelling products/software these days for the Mac exclusively (Final Cut, iLife series, Motion, Shake, etc.).
The other reason this will never go anywhere is that there simply is no demand for this product. Or watch their video card give the emulator's OpenGL fits. To add an emulator on top of that can only mean trouble.įor example, I want to see someone use Toast via the emulator on an uber-cheap CD burner. PC users are still plagued with major headaches for such things. Apple has complete control over such things, so it's fairly easy for them to virtually guarantee compliance and operability.
Hercules, S/370, S/390 and z/Arch emulator.ARAnyM, emulator for Atari ST/TT/Falcon family.GXemul, emulator for multiple systems including m88k.SIMH, The Computer History Simulation Project.MINDE, an emulator for some old x86 demos.MARSSx86, a cycle accurate accurate x86 simulator that uses QEMU.VirtualBox, an open source x86 virtualizer.KVM, Kernel-based Virtual Machine for Linux.U-Boot, a firmware which is used for some PowerPC boards in QEMU.OVMF provides UEFI support for IA32 (x86) and X64 (x86-64) guests.The EFI BIOS comes from the TianoCore Project.SLOF, the Slimline Open Firmware, is used in QEMU for the "pseries" machine.The OpenHackWare (archived ) Open Firmware implementation.The OpenBIOS project, an open source Open Firmware implementation.The PC BIOS from the Bochs IA-32 Emulator Project.JavaQemu, a GUI for QEMU written in Java.These projects seem to be abandoned, thus these GUIs likely do not work with the latest version of QEMU anymore and the links are only provided here for historical reasons: QtEmu, a graphical user interface for QEMU written in Qt5 for GNU/Linux, FreeBSD, Windows and MacOS.This is a good foundation API for building integration testing systems, richer QEmu-based applications, and so forth.
A graphical desktop management app using libvirt.
virt-install, virt-clone, virt-convert a set of command line tools for provisioning new VMs from install media, existing VMs and appliances, respectively.libvirt provides an API for managing QEMU/KVM (and other hypervisors) exposed in C, Perl, Python, OCaml, Ruby, and Java, with bridges to AMQP/QMF and DMTF CIM.Blackfin target (maintained by Mike Frysinger).qemu-linaro - obsolete (but includes OMAP3 support).
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