The third way, and the way I do it, is to run a Linux inside Windows. I dropped cygwin on my pc at work and use andLinux now (http://andlinux.org), which is running a linux kernel in a Win32 process (as a service in background). X applications are exported to a local W32 XServer. This is much faster than X apps compiled for cygwin. You'll have clipboard sharing between the Linux and W32 windows, too.

This article led me to andLinux:
www.techanodyne.com/2007/03/forget-vmware-run-colinux.html


Robin


On Thu, Jan 8, 2009 at 10:41 PM, Raimund Kohl-Füchsle <mail@rk-f.me> wrote:
Hi guys,

it may happen that I have to switch to Windows XP and since I have no
idea how XP works (up to this point in time I only ran Linux machines) I
thought to ask since I want to stick with org-mode: How do I get
org-mode and emacs run best with XP?  As far as I know there are at
least two ways to get emacs running; one is to simply download emacs,
two is downloading cygwin; if it is cygwin that I have to go with then
which emacs?  If I saw it right there are several choices ... ummm ...
any hints on that?

Thanx in advance

ray


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