can I run Windows Embedded CE 6.0 on a regular PC? - windows-ce

As i just need the hard RT capabilities, can I install and run Windows Embedded CE 6.0 on a regular PC ? (dell or so ?), and UDP out some data ?

You can install Windows CE in a PC, but you would need to create your own image. See this tutorial in MSDN. Also google for CEPC.
Finally visit Mike Hall's blog. I remember reading a related article there, but I can't find it now. Anyhow, this blog is a great resource for Windows Embedded.

(From working with Windows CE 5.0, so there may be some differences, YMMV.)
You should be able to run Windows CE both in an emulator and installed on the device itself as the host operating system.
In the first case all you need is an emulator, which is provided with the development kit and in a more expensive version of Visual Studio. This will run the OS fine, albeit a bit slow depending on the architecture you choose to build the Guest OS for.
In the second case you will actually need to find or write drivers for the hardware that you want to run on and use. This will require the Platform Builder application (I believe it's a plugin to Visual Studio now) and knowledge of the hardware that you are running on. Windows CE itself does support x86 processors, although I don't remember if it supports all x86 processors (instruction sets) or just 486's.
If you want to go down the second route you also may be able to get an Intel Atom or AMD Geode board support package (BSP) which will help you develop the drivers.

Related

Alternatives for windows phone emulator in Non-slat machines

Post installing Windows 10 , and then Visual studio 2015 pro, I found , to my disappointment , that my laptop model G480lenovo doesn't support Hardware virtualization. In fact there is no entry for "CPU" in my BIOS configuration section.
So then , there is no phone emulators which I could use available in my VS
What are the alternatives here for the emulators that I could use, for testing universal windows applications?
Any pointers here?
If you cannot run Hyper-V on your machine, you need to test it directly with device.
But...I think it's better to double confirm if the CPU doesn't support SLAT. There is tools called Coreinfo. And you can download it from windows sysinternals.
After you download it and extract to a folder(for example: c:\coreinfo). Open command prompt as administrator and navigate to the folder(cd c:\coreinfo), then run coreinfo.exe -v (as below image shows). You can see it is supported on my end.
I did a quick research and found the G480 Lenovo uses i5-3210M or i3-2370M. And found the following specifications on intel official website which indicates both CPU support the EPT(Extended Page Tables) which is SLAT.
http://ark.intel.com/products/67355/Intel-Core-i5-3210M-Processor-3M-Cache-up-to-3_10-GHz-rPGA
http://ark.intel.com/products/53442/Intel-Core-i3-2370M-Processor-3M-Cache-2_40-GHz
If you cannot find the options in BIOS, I think you need to contact your vendor to help you and maybe you need to update your BIOS firmware.

Building Qt apps for Windows Phone on Linux

Related to this
I'm planning to develop an app for Android using Qt Quick Controls and an Android Emulator. The same set of components is said to work on Windows Phone. Thus I'd like to build the app for Windows Phone as well.
Unfortunately, Qt for Windows Phone is only available for Windows.
I don't own any Windows phone. I'm using a computer running Linux.
Is it possible to build the app for Windows Phone and test it in an Emulator without virtualizing/dual-booting Windows
Well there is Wine. This is what wikipedia says about it;
Wine (short for Wine Is Not an Emulator) is a free and open source compatibility layer software application that aims to allow applications designed for Microsoft Windows to run on Unix-like operating systems. Wine also provides a software library, known as Winelib, against which developers can compile Windows applications to help port them to Unix-like systems.
You can find more info about Wine here; https://www.winehq.org/
I haven't tried it before but since it says "allow applications designed for Microsoft Windows to run on Unix-like operating systems," I'm thinking it should work.
This is your only option. If it doesn't work, then i guess you should think about running windows on virtual machine or dual booting with windows. Good luck!

Need Windows CE in 3072L

I'm trying to create windows CE OS that will run in my industrial CPU using Microsoft Studio 2005. All my tried was failed.
Im trying to build a Windows CE that have
Catalog items view
Storage
Primary disk/storage/master/slave
Secondary
CAB
CF card
Device Manager
Registry flush
Pci 1710
Internet explorer
.netframework
C++
Usb
Uno3072l
Display
Audio
And other basic utilities
I hope that someone will build the windows for me without any error. And share the link here so i can download.
Or, someone who can teach me how to solve the error. I am really stuck.
The Advantech 3072L is a simple x86-basd machine. You can likely use the x86 BSP that ships with Platform Builder, though Advantech may also have a platform specific BSP for any peripherals. Without more info on the version of Platform Builder you're using, what you've tried and the errors you're seeing we can't provide much more help than that.

How to emulate Windows CE 5.0 on ARMV4i architecture

I am developing Qt application for Windows CE 5.0 device.
My setup is:
Qt 4.7.3 compiled with Visual Studio 2005 using Windows CE 5.0 Standard SDK.
Everything works OK on real device, though I would like to test software "locally" in an emulator.
Visual Studio 2005 provides Pocket PC 2003, Windows Mobile 6 emulator images but no Windows CE 5.0.
Windows Microsoft CE 5.0 Emulator does that, but its sample device is based on i486, so this doesn't work for me...
I found some kind "Plaftorm Builder" and "ARMV4i BSP for Windows CE 5.0", but I am not building device or it's SDK, and I am not interested in specific device at all. All i need is "generic" AMRv4 WinCE 5 image for basic testing...
So what is possible outcomes for me?
Microssoft stopped providing Windows CE OS images for the emulator after the x86 emulator was abandoned, and for good reason. Windows CE is a modular OS so it's not possible to create an Emulator OS image that matches what all devices are and my guess is that there were too many support calls and complaints about how the emulator either contained something unwanted or didn't contain something that was wanted. The point being that there is no "generic Windows CE device" so there's no way to create an emulator of one.
The response from Microsoft was to provide the ARM-based Device Emulator 3.0 (available as a Standalone Release) and a BSP for the emulator so developers can create their own OS images that match their actual target hardware OSes.
So your options are to either create an OS yourself or find an OEM that provides an emulator image for their device (I'm not aware of one offhand, but I very, very rarely use the emulators so I've never bothered to look).

Windows Mobile Emulator For Linux

I was developing Windows Mobile applications on a Windows machine using C#, just to test the platform, but now I'm back to Linux and now developing for Windows CE on it(CeGCC and FPC), but it's very boring to compile and send the executable to the device everytime just to do a simple test, then I want to know where can I find a good emulator for Linux to debug my projects.
Qemu is really nice and its open source. You can also attach a debugger to Qemu to debug operating systems, comes in handy if you are writing device drivers. Using QEMU you can emulate other processor types such as ARM. personally I use VMWare workstation unless i need to emulate another processor type.
Unfortunately, your only bet is trying to run Microsoft's own emulator under Wine. This is the only ARM emulator you will find Windows Mobile images for. Search the web, some people had success with this approach - though the installation is tricky. Oh, and you won't get network working in the emulator, as this requires a special Windows device driver (which obviously won't work under Wine).
For this last reason, you may want to make a full desktop Windows (or possibly ReactOS) installation inside qemu, and install the PDA emulator inside the PC emulator.
And think how cool it would be to play Super Mario Bros inside a NES emulator inside a PDA emulator inside a PC emulator! :)))))

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