J
JJJ Ham
Guest
copy pasting this from Microsoft Learn forums because answers may be more common here;in regard to Virtual Machines, I am aware that you need to enable Virtualization in the Bios, which is related to the CPU; however, there's also Hyper-V within Windows itselfwhat's the difference between the two? does enabling Hyper-V automatically enable Virtualization in the Firmware? does Hyper-V simply allow you to create a VM as long as the Bios Virtualization is enabled?I was able to turn Hyper-V on without Virtualization enabled in the Bios, so what would have happened if I tried to use it?to clarify,
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