![]() I don’t know VirtualBox, but in the VM CPU setup there should be a flag you can set to expose the VT Chipset to the guest, I suspect that’s what you’re missing.įWIW… as a few others seem to be assuming, all windows versions since Win7 have Hyper-V enabled as a role that can be installed, and since Microsoft has native kernel additions both to super Hyper-V server s well as native guest additions in all windows versions since Win 2008 and most Linux distributions in the last several years, you’re likely to get much better performance and use out of it… First thing to check: make sure that you’ve enabled “Virtualization” or VTX Chipset in BIOS… I’m going to assume you’ve done so already, though, because you already have Ubuntu running.
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