Lloyd Kvam wrote: > http://ark.intel.com/Product.aspx?id=42014 > claims that the P7550 supports virtualization which I expect to show up > as vmx in the cpuflags. > > I bought a new HP laptop which featured a P7550 processor and expected > to be able to use KVM. Unfortunately, the vmx flag is not present, and > HP does not believe they disabled vmx capabilities. > > http://forum.notebookreview.com/showpost.php?s=c0762a76f7b00eada10c7b8f986d9822&p=5272854&postcount=6 > This post convinced me that the Intel page is wrong. > > Can anyone suggest a good course of action? Have any of you encountered > this problem? I can grumble to Newegg amd HP, but Intel appears to be > the party at fault. > >
I presume without kvm support the virtual machine runs like molasses right? My Acer laptop circa 2006-2007 came with an AMD X2 TL-50 and it has virtualization support. Pretty much all AMD processors have virtualization support although they are generally slower than the common dual core Intel processors. Both AMD and Intel's web sites make it difficult to come up with intelligent choices. There are motherboard compatibility problems as well. That's why many IT shops run away from integration work. They'd much rather let the manufacturers do the heavy lifting. To make matters more difficult the margins on modern systems tend to be very thin so it's hard to justify too much time building them. If the problem comes down to the Intel CPU having virtualization support but HP hasn't properly integrated it with their motherboard you should be able to complain to HP. -Alex _______________________________________________ gnhlug-discuss mailing list gnhlug-discuss@mail.gnhlug.org http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss/