robmlsl's Posts

Thank you, I will move over to the ESXi forums.
Thanks so much for all you input, I installed the ESXi free on a HP Server, yes, it is a lot simpler than I imagined. So far all went ok, managed to installed a few test Guest OS. OK, I know this i... See more...
Thanks so much for all you input, I installed the ESXi free on a HP Server, yes, it is a lot simpler than I imagined. So far all went ok, managed to installed a few test Guest OS. OK, I know this is a free version so I am not expecting a free lunch, but is the following possible ? 1. GPU passthrough, not to run things like Autodesk Revit or Adobe Cloud Suite, but enough power to run decent graphics software such as Sketchup and other simple art software that will look for a GPU with 1GB minimum.  I read it required a vGPU such as a P100 or Tesla P40 etc that are supported by ESXi, anything not on their list is a no no ?  because when I am eventually learned all the basics and tested enough, I have plans to implement the paid version for other places. 2. Is it safe enough to access VMs using RDP without commercial SSL/Cert ? 3. What would be the best way to restore a backup image (ie. Acronis) into a VM, I plan to test a small office by restoring one Server 2016 image into VM, and then the two wks into another two VMs.   Learned so much already just by reading replies, thanks so much.    
Hi, They will be Windows 10, but not Windows 11 until 2025. The main reason for VMware Pro is because I have used this few years ago and I find it easy to navigate and simple on resources, whereby E... See more...
Hi, They will be Windows 10, but not Windows 11 until 2025. The main reason for VMware Pro is because I have used this few years ago and I find it easy to navigate and simple on resources, whereby ESXi seem to be a shark to wrestle with than a salmon.
Hi, thank you for  your reply. What are the limitation or problems of Vmware Pro caused you to ditch ?   I can try the ESXi but this is a really simple office setup where users still run on 10 year... See more...
Hi, thank you for  your reply. What are the limitation or problems of Vmware Pro caused you to ditch ?   I can try the ESXi but this is a really simple office setup where users still run on 10 year old Dell PCs, but the lack of support is tricky, but at the same time buying the full ESXi is uncomical for us for now.
I have a small office with 4 users, as two or three of them choose to work from home I am thinking of creating a VM environment so they can use a client to access their office VM. The idea is to use... See more...
I have a small office with 4 users, as two or three of them choose to work from home I am thinking of creating a VM environment so they can use a client to access their office VM. The idea is to use Vmware to host the 2016 server as a VM, and then each user also as a VM, now all they need to access their machine is to open some remote software like Radmin or Teamviewer to directly access their OfficePC VM. There will be nothing graphical as just standard graphics for accounting software. I am looking to use a HP Z440 with 10 cores and 64GB RAM, and 4xSAS in RAID10, this way I can have this VM server machine in my home office which has a leased line (300/300) Question is , can VMWare Pro do this ?  Is it safe enough for a live working environment, and finally, Is Windows the best platform or should I look at Ubuntu as the host ? Thanks for any help on this.
  • i