For those who don't like to read instructions:
The crucial step is to click on the "Advanced..." button in the CD/DVD drive configuration and select "SCSI" device.
But for those who like step-by-step instructions (and specifics), read on.
The above has been confirmed to work with:
I don't see any reason why the same steps shouldn't work on a Mac running VMWare Fusion, but I haven't tested this. Additionally, Macs' internal optical drives are not necessarily good for ripping.
The crucial step is to click on the "Advanced..." button in the CD/DVD drive configuration and select "SCSI" device.
But for those who like step-by-step instructions (and specifics), read on.
- Install VMware Player on your host operating system of choice. For example, VMware Player 3.0 on Ubuntu 9.04. (Despite its recent release, VMware Player 3.0 does not yet support Ubuntu 9.10 as a host OS.)
- VM > Create a new VM
- Insert your Windows installation CD (or choose your ISO). For example, Windows 2000 Professional.
- If the guest OS is not automatically detected by VMware, select it from the drop-down menu.
- Customize the hardware:
- 512 MB RAM (256 MB might work, but is untested)
- CD/DVD: click on the "Advanced..." button and select "SCSI" device. This is the crucial step. Failing to do this will cause all sorts of I/O errors when dbPoweramp tries to read from the drive (for example, when attempting to configure AccurateRip). Incidentally, do NOT select "legacy emulation", in which VMware pretends to be the ATAPI device instead of passing through commands.
- Proceed with OS installation.
- When the installation prompts you to remove the CD in your drive, either remove it (if you're installing from a physical CD) or go to VM > Settings > CD/DVD and select "Use a physical drive".
- (Optional) Install VMware Tools (VM > Install VMware Tools). This is not strictly necessary for dbPoweramp, but it is recommended, as Windows 2000 will otherwise support only 640x480 16-color graphics.
The above has been confirmed to work with:
- VMware Player 3.0 (free)
- Ubuntu 9.04 host (free)
- Windows 2000 guest (both original and SP4)
- dbPoweramp R13.3
- several different IDE optical drives, including a laptop drive with a StarTech OPT2SATA slim-optical-to-SATA bridge
I don't see any reason why the same steps shouldn't work on a Mac running VMWare Fusion, but I haven't tested this. Additionally, Macs' internal optical drives are not necessarily good for ripping.
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