![]() The good thing with Windows operating systems is you rarely have to build anything from source (ie. The Chrome OS is a different animal because although Unix-like it could have compatibility issues with WINE, the program I googled was CrossOver (technically Chrome is closer to Unix/Linux, not OS X which is close, but not Windows)Īs how to run Linux/OS X programs on Windows is another thing. WINE ran nice on Ubuntu and openSuse back in 2007 or so on Windows Vista. ![]() you're basically hanging on to volunteer software engineers porting programs for free, it's fairly stable and has a database where you can check the compatibility which ranges from unchecked to bronze-gold depending on how well the ported software installs&runs. I've used WINE and, although it had it's quirks ie. WINE is a virtual desktop for Unix like systems (probably doable in Linux, I think Chrome OS is Linux kernel-based) and Parallels is for running Windows programs on OS X that aren't supported by Apple (I had it, never used it in practice though but OS X/MacOS is a hybrid kernel based on BSD/Unix much like Linux, and Chrome) ![]()
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