Vous consultez actuellement le France version du site.
Voulez-vous passer à votre site local ?
7 TEMPS DE LECTURE MIN

Run Linux in a virtual machine

YOU’LL NEED THIS VIRTUALBOX AND UBUNTU

Time required: Two hours.

THERE ARE PLENTY

of reasons you should want to try out Linux, but in keeping with our first tutorial this month (see page 64), one of them is to make it harder for your activity to be tracked online. If you want to make sure you can’t be tracked, our best advice would be to use a different PC. You can do this even if you don’t have a second computer by setting up a virtual machine on your computer, which behaves as though it’s an entirely separate device. If set up properly, nothing that happens on your virtual machine will impact your main Windows installation, meaning that any websites you visit won’t be able to identify you.

Here, we’re going to set up a virtual machine running Ubuntu, which is the version of Linux that Windows users will find most familiar. You can also do this with Windows, but that would require you to pay for a second license for the operating system.

The advantage of using Linux is that you can install it for free and, if you want to boost your security further, you can delete the virtual machine every few months and set up a new one at no cost. You don’t need to use your Linux virtual machine every day—just start it up when you want to browse a site you’re not so sure about, and shut it down again when you’ve finished. If you enjoy using Linux, you could even install it on an older PC—running Windows 7, say—to extend its working life.

Débloquez cet article et bien plus encore avec
Vous pouvez en profiter :
Découvrez l'intégralité de cette édition
Accès instantané à plus de 600 titres
Des milliers d'anciens numéros
Pas de contrat ni d'engagement
Essayer pour €1.09
S'ABONNER
30 jours d'accès, puis seulement €11,99 / mois. Résiliation à tout moment. Nouveaux abonnés uniquement.


En savoir plus
Pocketmags Plus
Pocketmags Plus

Cet article est tiré de...


View Issues
Maximum PC
March 2023
VOIR EN MAGASIN

Autres articles dans ce numéro


editorial
GOOD THINGS COME IN SMALL PACK AGES
LIKE MANY OF YOU, I’m a member of
QUICKSTART
Intel stakes World’s Fastest Chips claim
Company claims both desktop and mobile crowns
NVIDI A’S MARKETING MESS
POOR PERFORMANCE AT HIGH PRICES
HOT RADEON 7900 CARDS
Faulty vapor chamber to blame
Tech Tr iumphs and Tragedies
A monthly snapshot of what’s good and bad in tech
ZEN 4 V-CACHE LANDS
Sixteen cores, 144MB of cache, a gaming monster
NEW MACBOOK PROS AND MINIS
Debut of the M2 Pro and M2 Max processors
Microsoft drops $10 billion on Open AI
MICROSOFT SEEMS to have retreated from the metaverse
Win10 is dead
From Januar y, you can no longer buy
Battlemage next year
Intel entered the graphics card market with a
AMD RX 7900 XTX Vapor Chamber Woes
FOR A MONTH OR TWO, Nvidia was in
THE TOP FIVE STEAM DECK ACCESSORIES
RECENTLY CELEBRATING its first bir thday, Valve’s Steam
OLED screen tech is finally here, but I’m not feelin’ it
TRADE CHAT © CORSAIR IT’S BEEN A LONG
Elgato Stream Deck+
WE ALL KNOW that a cluttered desk can
LETTERS
DOCTOR
THIS MONTH THE DOCTOR TACKLES...
4070 Ti GAMING PC
What happens when you take Nvidia’s latest RT X 40 series GPU, Intel’s hot test new CPU, and squeeze them into a tiny NUC 13 E x treme case? As Sam Lewis f inds out, this compact chassis packs some punch...
WHAT’S IN THE BOX
ZOTAC GAMING GEFORCE RTX 4070 TI TRINIT Y
CRACKING INTO THE CASE
Is it a petite powerhouse, or a diminutive danger?
GREAT THINGS COME IN SMALL PACKAGES
1 1 It’s a tight 1 squeeze, to
GAMING WITH THE NUC 13
WITH THE SYSTEM UP and running and ticking
CREATING WITH THE NUC 13
ALTHOUGH IT’S more console-sized than a regular PC,
OUR FAVORITE SMALL FORM FACTOR CHASSIS
THE INTEL NUC is at the forefront of
LETTERS WE TACKLE TOUGH READER QUESTIONS ON...
> Budget Build issu > Cases, Cases, Cas > Wrist-based 2FA
THE BUILDS
THIS MONTH’S STREET PRICES...
MAXIMUMPC
BEST OF CES 2023
After a quiet 2022, the world’s biggest tech show returned to normal in Las Vegas. Guy Cocker was on the ground to find the PC hardware that will shape 2023
BEST FREE DOWNLOADS FOR 2023
Make the most of your PC this year without spending a dime. Robert Irvine reveals all the best free sof t ware, apps, and downloads to get you through the year ahead
THE MOTHERBOARD MAP
The motherboard is the foundation of ever y PC but how well do you know this complicated component? Darien Graham-Smith explores all its main features
3D PRINTING comes of age
Whatever happened to the 3D-printing revolution? Nik Rawlinson takes a fresh look at the much-maligned technology and finds that the hardware has come a long way
R&D
HOW TO STEP-BY-STEP GUIDES TO IMPROVING YOUR PC
TIP OF THE MONTH SNAPDROP A nyone who’s
AUTOPSY THIS MONTH WE DISSECT...
GoPro HERO11 Black Mini
Block all adverts in Windows
YOU’LL NEED THIS
Stop your printer being hacked
YOU’LL NEED THIS WEB-CONNECTED PRINTER
Expand your laptop’s keyboard
YOU’LL NEED THIS
LAB NOTES GUY COCKER, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Tech Trends from CES
Editor’s Pick:A.N. Other broken miniLED monitor
What’s going on with monitor makers these days?
IN THE LAB
Nvidia GeFor ce RTX 4070 Ti
Let me introduce myself, again
Samsung Od yssey Neo G8
Can one screen do it all?
Lenovo Yoga Slim 9i
A touch of class f rom the Yoga lineup
Linksys Atlas Pro 6 (AX5400)
Wi-Fi 6 mesh system at an accessible price point
Intel NUC 13 Extreme Raptor Canyon
A sizzling Small Form Factor per formance
Netgear Orbi RBK 763
The best WiFi 6 mesh networking kit
Corsair HS65 Surround Wireless
The HS65 has been given a features boost
Roccat Kone Air Wireless
Hi-tech batterypowered mouse
Roccat Vulcan II Max
A keyboard that prioritizes looks over substance?
Forspoken
An exceptionally middling experience
Dead Space
A definitive remake and a promising precedent
Chat
X
Support Pocketmags