![]() It’s much easier to move Linux installations between different machines with different hardware configurations. The process for converting a Linux virtual machine should be about the same, but without all the extra tweaks required to make Windows behave. You’ll then have to manually create a copy of the disk and convert it to a VirtualBox VDI file. If you’re feeling particularly adventerous, they do offer some unsupported instructions for converting a physical Windows computer to a VirtualBox virtual machine. This requires some registry tweaking and shutting down the computer. VirtualBox doesn’t offer an easy graphical utility for converting a physical machine to a virtual machine. It’ll create a copy of the running Windows system as a VHD file, and you can take that VHD file to another computer and run it in Hyper-V - the converted physical system should boot up just fine as long as you launch it in Microsoft’s own Hyper-V virtual machine software. You’ll be able to select which partitions and drives you want to include in the VHD file. ![]() Run this tool on the Windows system you want to convert. This utility will convert a running Windows system to a VHD (virtual hard drive) file for use in Microsoft’s virtual machine products, such as the Hyper-V virtual machine tool included with professional versions of Windows 8 and 8.1. Microsoft offers a Disk2vhd tool - one of their many useful SysInternals utilities. RELATED: How to Create and Run Virtual Machines With Hyper-V Save that virtual machine to an external hard drive and boot it up on a different computer. ![]() The utility will then create a virtual machine from the current Windows system, modifying it so it will boot properly in a virtual machine program.
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