Hello, i'm noob, this is my problem, I want to install windows xp mce 2005 in vmware workstation 15 but the os is it divided in 2 cd iso, disk 1 and disk 2... when I install it from first cd iso the operation was done but wmware workstation dont demand me the second disk that contain media center and other stuff, so the os wen is starting it works regularly but the media center and other applications are missing ... can anyone help me ? thanks!
... but wmware workstation dont demand me the second disk ...
It's actually the guest operating system, which has to request another installation resource.
Did you start the installation from the ISO image directly, i.e. using the option to install the OS later, or did you try to use the Easy Install Wizard?
I never installed this OS edition, but I think the way to do use the install OS later option.
André
ok thanks going to try install later...
Moderator: Thread moved to the Windows guest area.
ok, now working ! thanks !! but seems that I dont have a internet connection... internet exploer not working... what settings I have to put in vm settings ? thx
There can be several reasons for this:
Does the network adapter show up in the guest OS, and does it have a valid IP address?
André
i selected nat by default... now seems connected but when i open intenet pages i receive this message
Your connection is not private
Attackers might be trying to steal your information from www.google.com (for example, passwords, messages, or credit cards). NET::ERR_CERT_AUTHORITY_INVALID
Automatically report details of possible security incidents to Google. Privacy policy
Back to safetyHide advanced
This server could not prove that it is www.google.com; its security certificate is not trusted by your computer's operating system. This may be caused by a misconfiguration or an attacker intercepting your connection.
Proceed to www.google.com (unsafe)
Windows XP is an old OS, and security things changed quite a bit since it went out of support.
The message you receive could be related to unsupported encryption ciphers, unknown root certificates, etc.
That's not unexpected, and it's actually up to you to decide whether you want to take the risk to go online without sufficient protection.
André