Hyper-v

How to convert a Physical PC into a Virtual Machine with Disk2VHD

How to convert a Physical PC into a Virtual Machine with Disk2VHD P2V

#convert #Physical #Virtual #Machine #Disk2VHD

“Knowledge Sharing Tech”

Use Disk2VHD free tool from Microsoft SysInternals to convert
your Windows PC to a VM in Hyper-V. Use this method to convert Windows 7 PC to a Virtual Machine so to keep using old applications like Internet Explorer or use it also on any version of Windows Vista, 10 or Windows 11
Disk2VHD will…

source

 

To see the full content, share this page by clicking one of the buttons below

Related Articles

7 Comments

  1. It's all FAKE, because if you slow down the video, you'll notice when he says, "I'm going to click on the three dots here, and here I go my Pendrive 'G' and I'm going to change the file name" but he clicks on F, TopSelf256. , a big lie!!!

  2. One important note: if you sign in to windows with a Microsoft account (i.e. PIN, Hello sign-in, etc.), you may not be able to sign in once you create a Hyper-V virtual machine with the resulting virtual disk, since Hyper-V will only allow signing in through a local account with remote desktop access permissions (perhaps an MS account would work if you disable the β€œRequire Windows Hello” sign in option within windows user account sign in options).

  3. Thank you. The problem with any OS inside a virtual machine is that you only have half the total RAM to work with. I have ran into freezing even running lightweight Linux distros inside Virtualbox. (My host PC has 4 GB RAM (3.9 GB available), so the virtual machine only can get 1.9 GB of RAM).

Leave a Reply