The history of computing is littered with the remains of forgotten operating systems—some rendered obsolete by technological progress, some that never quite captured the public imagination, and some ...
The Virtual OS Museum gives you a peek at old-school OSes. You can run any one of hundreds of operating systems. All you need to make this free tool work is VirtualBox. Every so often, a Linux project ...
A momentous occasion in computing history has been achieved with the release of the Virtual OS Museum. A lone developer has collected over 1700 OS installs across over 250 emulated hardware platforms ...
With the "Virtual OS Museum", 80 years of computer history can be experienced directly in the emulator. The project makes historical systems usable with a click. If you want to take a deep dive into ...
If you feel like every OS now feels too polished, flat, and boring, there’s a new museum that takes you down a rabbit hole of all the vintage computers. Virtual OS Museum, curated by Andrew Warkentin, ...
The Virtual OS Museum is an OS emulator implemented as a Linux VM for QEMU, VirtualBox, or UTM. A custom emulator-independent launcher is provided, with all operating systems and emulators ...
OK, every operating system is a bit of a stretch — Windows Vista notably didn’t make the cut — but [Andrew]’s Virtual OS museum has a good claim to being the most comprehensive archive of operating ...
There exists a Virtual OS Museum, and it is exactly what it sounds like. Andrew Warkentin, a developer who has been quietly collecting emulator images since 2003, has packaged the lot into a Linux VM ...