Hi,
I am looking for IE6 to run on Vista - In the URL below, it states that
there is a Wine for Windows now - and IE 6 can be installed once you have Wine for Windows.
Is this correct info?
http://tredosoft.com/IE6_For_Vista_Part_1
I have recently installed Debian on a old Pentium 3 machine, so I may check out Wine on that platform as well.
If the hardware can take it.
I have I believe 384MB RAM.
Don't have the monitor hooked up - so cannot say for sure at the moment.
Thanks,
Chronk
Wine for Windows Vista?
Wine for Windows Vista?
On Mon, Feb 23, 2009 at 9:43 PM, chronk <[email protected]> wrote:
"Completely isolate Internet Explorer 6 from the Windows Kernel either
through virtualization technology (e.g. VirtualPC, VMWare, or QEMU) or
through Windows kernel emulation that actually works(!)(e.g. running
IE6 using a version of Wine compiled under Cygwin or Interix)."
Wine doesn't currently compile under Cygwin.
That said, you may have luck compiling the dlls under Mingw and using
those, but not sure if it'll work or not. Not really what Wine is
meant to do.
http://wiki.winehq.org/CompilingDLLsUsingMingw
--
-Austin
You didn't read it very carefully, did you?Hi,
I am looking for IE6 to run on Vista - In the URL below, it states that
there is a Wine for Windows now - and IE 6 can be installed once you have Wine for Windows.
Is this correct info?
http://tredosoft.com/IE6_For_Vista_Part_1
"Completely isolate Internet Explorer 6 from the Windows Kernel either
through virtualization technology (e.g. VirtualPC, VMWare, or QEMU) or
through Windows kernel emulation that actually works(!)(e.g. running
IE6 using a version of Wine compiled under Cygwin or Interix)."
Wine doesn't currently compile under Cygwin.
That said, you may have luck compiling the dlls under Mingw and using
those, but not sure if it'll work or not. Not really what Wine is
meant to do.
http://wiki.winehq.org/CompilingDLLsUsingMingw
--
-Austin
Wine for Windows Vista?
2009/2/24 chronk <[email protected]>:
with it in our spare time
http://wiki.winehq.org/WineOnWindows
Problems:
1. It doesn't compile.
2. Even if it did, it wouldn't be able to launch Windows programs in Wine as-is.
Mostly it's an exercise for the moment.
It is, however, a desirable thing, as newer versions of Windows
jettison compatibility with older versions of Windows.
- d.
There is no Wine for Windows. There are some of us pottering aboutI am looking for IE6 to run on Vista - In the URL below, it states that
there is a Wine for Windows now - and IE 6 can be installed once you have Wine for Windows.
Is this correct info?
with it in our spare time

http://wiki.winehq.org/WineOnWindows
Problems:
1. It doesn't compile.
2. Even if it did, it wouldn't be able to launch Windows programs in Wine as-is.
Mostly it's an exercise for the moment.
It is, however, a desirable thing, as newer versions of Windows
jettison compatibility with older versions of Windows.
- d.
Wine for Windows Vista?
On Tue, 24 Feb 2009 12:58:35 +0000
David Gerard <[email protected]> wrote:
of the main reasons people stay with Windows is application
incompatibility with Linux. But if an application suddenly works under
Linux (through wine) and dropped on Windows, then that's just another
reason to switch.
Making a Windows wine just seems to be doing M$ job for them... and I
think they're trying pretty hard to make *your* job harder, so why make
their job easier?
(don't mean to troll, jw)
--
Josh Dukes
MicroVu IT Department
David Gerard <[email protected]> wrote:
Doesn't incompatibility between Windows versions just help Linux? One2009/2/24 chronk <[email protected]>:
It is, however, a desirable thing, as newer versions of Windows
jettison compatibility with older versions of Windows.
of the main reasons people stay with Windows is application
incompatibility with Linux. But if an application suddenly works under
Linux (through wine) and dropped on Windows, then that's just another
reason to switch.
Making a Windows wine just seems to be doing M$ job for them... and I
think they're trying pretty hard to make *your* job harder, so why make
their job easier?
(don't mean to troll, jw)
--
Josh Dukes
MicroVu IT Department
Wine for Windows Vista?
To list as well:
On Tue, Feb 24, 2009 at 2:17 PM, Josh Dukes <[email protected]> wrote:
the Win32 API in an open way. If that helps Linux adoption, all the
better.
and do that, more power to them.
--
-Austin
On Tue, Feb 24, 2009 at 2:17 PM, Josh Dukes <[email protected]> wrote:
Wine isn't just for Linux you know. The goal of Wine is to implementOn Tue, 24 Feb 2009 12:58:35 +0000
David Gerard <[email protected]> wrote:
Doesn't incompatibility between Windows versions just help Linux? One2009/2/24 chronk <[email protected]>:
It is, however, a desirable thing, as newer versions of Windows
jettison compatibility with older versions of Windows.
of the main reasons people stay with Windows is application
incompatibility with Linux. But if an application suddenly works under
Linux (through wine) and dropped on Windows, then that's just another
reason to switch.
the Win32 API in an open way. If that helps Linux adoption, all the
better.
That's irrelevant IMHO. If someone wants to take the Wine source codeMaking a Windows wine just seems to be doing M$ job for them... and I
think they're trying pretty hard to make *your* job harder, so why make
their job easier?
and do that, more power to them.
--
-Austin