Thanks for the links and all, but I really don't see the point in doing more to solve this. To do this, press Win + S to open Windows Search. The logs contain this: HMR3Init: Attempting fall back to NEM: AMD-V is not available, which does mean either Hyper-V is enabled and using AMD-V or the feature is disabled entirely (although I don't think this is the case because it's enabled in the BIOS and Task Manager says Virtualization is Enabled).Ĭlueless of what to try next I'll simply give up trying. Under the ‘Motherboard‘ tab, move the slider to increase the RAM. Now, click on the Settings and select ‘System‘ from the left side. įollowed every step, it really describes my issue, the turtle icon or just the virtualization icon that shows the machine is extremely slow. Launch VirtualBox and select the Virtual Machine. Does anyone know if these problems were resolved with the latest versions of Windows and/or VirtualBox Thanks. IIRC, it had something to do with the inability of Windows to share hyper-v tech with other apps. A while ago this was causing problems with VirtualBox VMs. I followed your link ( ), and this one too. Thinking of installing WSL2 on my Windows 11 machine. (Disable-WindowsOptionalFeature : The specified package is not valid Windows package). Windows 11 will only run in virtual machines that offer TPM 2.0 support (Image credit: TechRadar) Oracle has confirmed it is working on a new version of its VirtualBox VM software that will. I've tried system restore, all disk and system cleanups and checkups, nothing. I have this problem:, but the solution is Command Prompt or PowerShell, however it doesn't even register the command that I type in. First, yes Hyper-V is enabled and I probably didn't want to disable it because Windows Sandbox doesn't work without it for some reason, however nothing works to disable it.
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