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  2. BlueStacks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BlueStacks

    BlueStacks (also known as BlueStacks by now.gg, Inc.) is a chain of cloud-based cross-platform products developed by the San Francisco-based company of the same name. The BlueStacks App Player enables the execution of Android applications on computers running Microsoft Windows or macOS .

  3. List of emulators - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_emulators

    blueMSX: Emulates Z80 based computers and consoles; MAME: Emulates multiple arcade machines, video game consoles and computers; DAPHNE is an arcade emulator application that emulates a variety of laserdisc video games with the intent of preserving these games and making the play experience as faithful to the originals as possible. [2]

  4. Anbox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anbox

    BlueStacks has developed an App Player for Windows and MacOS capable of running Android applications in a container. The SPURV compatibility layer [9] is a similar project developed by Collabora. Waydroid also uses Android in an LXC container on a regular Linux system, using Wayland. [10] Wine - A Windows compatibility layer for Unix-like systems.

  5. System virtual machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_virtual_machine

    A system virtual machine (also called SYS-VM [citation needed]) is a virtual machine (VM) that provides a complete system platform and supports the execution of a complete operating system (OS). [1]

  6. VirtualBox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VirtualBox

    A new VM storage scheme where all VM data is stored in one single folder to improve VM portability; ... Support for Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard) and 10.7 (Lion) was ...

  7. Property list - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Property_list

    Since XML files, however, are not the most space-efficient means of storage, Mac OS X 10.2 introduced a new format where property list files are stored as binary files. Starting with Mac OS X 10.4, this is the default format for preference files. In Mac OS X 10.7, support for reading and writing files in JSON format was introduced. JSON and ...

  8. Resource fork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resource_fork

    A resource fork is a fork of a file on Apple's classic Mac OS operating system that is used to store structured data. It is one of the two forks of a file, along with the data fork, which stores data that the operating system treats as unstructured.

  9. Single-instance storage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-instance_storage

    Single-instance storage is a simple variant of data deduplication. While data deduplication may work at a segment or sub-block level, single-instance storage works at the whole-file level and eliminates redundant copies of entire files or e-mail messages.