Why does virtualization support have anything at all to do with battery life? I feel like you're starting out in some other part of the conversation and who knows how you arrived at your current question of virtualization vs. battery life. Having a program installed wouldn't necessarily have any impact on your battery. I have QEMU for example if it's not running then it's just extra bits sitting on the hard disk and makes no difference to the battery. As another example, your CPU likely has built-in virtualization support (depending on exactly what CPU it is.) This has no impact on your battery either. So perhaps you start from the beginning? :)

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