Duncan Smart's Weblog
insert witty, geeky tagline here…
June 24, 2009 by Duncan Wise 48 Comments
Using
Windows 7’s “XP Mode” to run IE 6,
Office Home And Business 2010 Key, IE 7 and IE8 side-by-side
Windows 7’s XP Mode is essentially a Windows XP virtual machine that runs in the new
Windows 7 version of Virtual PC. This new edition of Virtual PC includes cool features such as seamless windows. The main reason I’m interested in this is to run older versions of Internet Explorer for testing purposes. IE8’s compatibility mode does a pretty good job of emulating IE7 but there are differences, so I investigated how to get “real” IE7 running under
Windows 7’s XP Mode, without losing IE6.
Out of the box, the Virtual PC image is Windows XP SP3 with IE6. The trick to getting IE6 to appear as a seamless window like this is to launch the Virtual Windows XP virtual machine and in the VM, create a shortcut in the “All Users” Start Menu or desktop:
After a short delay, the shortcut will be duplicated into the
Windows 7 host’s start menu:
When you launch this shortcut in
Windows 7,
Office 2010 Standard, the main Virtual PC window will close and the application will be launched and projected onto your desktop.
Creating a VM for IE7
You can’t install IE7 side-by-side with IE6 on the same machine, so to run IE7 at the same time as IE6 we will need to create a new VM. Unfortunately,
Key Office 2007, if you run the VirtualWindowsXP.msi setup again you’ll get a message saying “Setup has detected that Virtual Windows XP is already installed”:
The workaround is to create a new instance of the VM manually using the supplied VHD as the base disk image. To do this do the following:
Open the Virtual Machines folder from the Start Menu and click Create virtual machine:
Specify a name and location for the virtual machine:
For memory I specified 256MB, which should me more than enough for just running IE7:
Here’s the important bit. Choose “Create a virtual hard disk using advanced options”
…and then choose a Differencing disk. This is the same way that the default Virtual Windows XP VM is set up:
If you want, you can change the default name and location (I didn’t bother):
For the parent virtual hard disk choose the original Virtual Windows XP virtual disk,
Office 2010 Home And Business, which on my machine was at C:\Program Files\Virtual Windows XP\Virtual Windows XP.vhd:
Now start the new Virtual PC you just created from the Virtual Machines folder and complete Windows Setup as appropriate, choosing a computer name unique for your network and an Administrator password:
When that’s done:
Enable Integration Features from the Tools menu of the Virtual PC window For credentials enter Administrator and the password you entered during setup.
I chose to Remember my credentials for convenience download and install IE7 in the VM,
When IE7 has installed and rebooted, create a shortcut to IE7 in the “All Users” start menu which,
Windows 7 Key Sale, after a short delay, will create a corresponding shortcut in the
Windows 7 start menu of the host.
So here’s the end result, IE6, IE7 and IE8 all running on
Windows 7:
Ahhh, 3 generations, all together – don’t they look adorable?
-->