jalaffa Posted October 18, 2016 Share Posted October 18, 2016 VirtualBox is an application installed on an existing host operating system; within this application, additional operating systems can be loaded and run, each with its own virtual environment. For example, several Linux distributions can be hosted on a single machine running Windows XP; likewise, XP and Vista can run on a machine running Linux, and so on. There is a free for personal or evaluation use proprietary version and a GNU General Public License (GPL) version. Thanks to jordan4x for the update.Download Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BALTAGY Posted October 19, 2016 Share Posted October 19, 2016 VirtualBox v5.1.8 Portable 32Bit (Size: 83.5 MB) Site: http://www.mirrorcreator.com Sharecode[?]: /files/36GGKYA3/VirtualBox_v5.1.8_32Bit.zip_links 64Bit (Size: 89.5 MB) Site: http://www.mirrorcreator.com Sharecode[?]: /files/RV907VZQ/VirtualBox_v5.1.8_64Bit.zip_links Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
snf Posted November 10, 2016 Share Posted November 10, 2016 Portable VirtualBox 5.1.8-111374 x86-amd64 Multilingual Online By PortableAppZ Download Portable VirtualBox 5.1.x Online (0.5 MB) Site: https://www.upload.ee Sharecode[?]: /files/6335215/VirtualBox_Portable_5.1.x_32-64_Multilingual_Online.exe.html In first screen enter (twice if Extension Pack needed): 5.1.8-111374 Extract and run VirtualBoxPortable. Don't use if you have VirtualBox installed. Online installer is also setup extractor if you download VirtualBox-5.1.8-111374-Win.exe(116 MB) and Oracle_VM_VirtualBox_Extension_Pack-5.1.8-111374.vbox-extpack(18.5 MB) in its folder. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mohenjo-daro Posted December 16, 2016 Share Posted December 16, 2016 I read somewhere that running a malware in VM will not infect the actual operating system on which it is installed. Is it true? Does it mean you/we can safely run any malware in VMs? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rseiler Posted December 16, 2016 Share Posted December 16, 2016 Never say never, but it would be some trick, particularly if you don't have NAT or Bridging enabled. I think it would have to be an exploit of VirtualBox itself, and what kind of malware would bother with that? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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