On 04/13/2013 05:49 PM, Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 02:44:20PM -0400, Michael Mol wrote:
> 
>>> I'm currently holding out on my Core2 though, because Haswell is on the
>>> doorstep, and I first wanna see what the market has to offer. The CPU part
>>> might not gain much in performance, but the graphics part got a big boost 
>>> and
>>> all models support VT-d now (according to cpu-world.com). Plus theoretically
>>> I'm a bit more future-proof due to the new socket (which is probably the 
>>> most
>>> annoying thing about the Intel world, compared to AMD).
>>>
>>
>> Be very careful. This laptop's processor does not have VT-x...and that
>> bit me.
> 
> At some point I found out that on my laptop I couldn't use VT-x either, even
> though the processor was supposed to support it. Doing a bit of digging in the
> tubes I found out that on many laptop it was disabled, and naturally the
> there was no option in the BIOS to enable it (even though it is a Pro line
> model, Samsung P50 for those who are interested). Thankfully, I found a
> (Windows) tool that would change that by doing some NVRAM voodoo.
> 
>> […]
>> If buying an Intel part, I'd be very, very careful to make sure that it
>> supported all the features I want. I've been bit by that on this
>> laptop...I had no idea it wouldn't have VT-x.
> 
> Well, in my (our?) case, it's a BIOS issue. I don't expect such issues for
> desktop systems which you built from scratch yourself. I wouldn't see a point
> for the manufacturer to artificially reduce functionality, because here it is
> very easy to buy a directly competing product. But I think I'm getting OT.
> 

You  can also look up the part directly on Intel's website. In my case:

http://ark.intel.com/products/55626/Intel-Pentium-Processor-B940-(2M-Cache-2_00-GHz)

Relevant line:

Intel® Virtualization Technology (VT-x)         No



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