Virtual lab
VirtualBox is a free, open-source hosted hypervisor designed to create and manage virtual machines (VMs) on a single physical computer. It enables you to run multiple operating systems simultaneously without rebooting or partitioning the hard drive. As a Type 2 hypervisor, it operates on existing OS such as Windows, macOS, Linux, or Solaris.
VirtualBox supports a wide range of guest systems, including Windows, Linux, BSD, and older versions of macOS. It includes snapshot functionality, cross-platform virtualization, support for Open Virtualization Format (OVF), and USB device passthrough. It’s widely used in development, testing, and sandbox environments for isolated and secure operations.
VirtualBox supports running various operating systems within a window on your host OS. It provides snapshot management, a shared clipboard, and drag-and-drop between systems. It supports importing and exporting virtual machines in OVF and VDI formats. It offers flexible networking options and USB device passthrough. While playback or media controls aren’t relevant, its virtualization-specific toolset allows controlled system testing and cross-OS application usage.
A digital sandbox
It's compatible with Windows, macOS, Linux, and Solaris as a host system. The tool supports a wide range of guest operating systems, including Windows, Linux distributions, FreeBSD, and older versions of macOS. The software itself has minimal requirements. However, the virtual machine's performance depends heavily on your computer's resources, like RAM and CPU. For best results, you should enable hardware-assisted virtualization.
The layout includes sections for general, system, display, storage, network, and USB configuration. You can clone VMs, manage snapshots, and access logs through the interface. The GUI allows launching, pausing, resetting, and shutting down VMs with visual controls. Although it lacks built-in search or playlist tools, configuration templates and import/export functions add flexibility. Guest Additions offer additional UI integration features such as dynamic resizing and shared folders.
A world of OS
Oracle VirtualBox provides cross-platform virtualization through a Type 2 hypervisor that supports multiple host and guest operating systems. It includes snapshot management, device passthrough, and OVF support for portability. It runs on Windows, macOS, Linux, and Solaris, with broad guest OS compatibility. While it handles basic and intermediate virtualization tasks well, performance varies depending on system specs and workload. Its modular interface and available customization settings support varied use cases.