Enable Hardware Virtualization

borate

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It seems I recall there was a setting for hardware virtualization in the BIOS but when I upgraded the BIOS that setting is no longer seen. This Asus P8P67LE is supposed to have it built in, according to a Windows article, but XP mode reports that it's no longer enabled.

There is a hotfix that allegedly will run XP mode, but not as well as true virtualization via the BIOS. Anyone have a clue on where it was enabled in the old BIOS version, which I tried to reinstall but it didn't take. No change was made; the new BIOS remains.
 

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Windows 7
Hello borate and welcome to Seven Forums the link below in blue is for your ASUS motherboard just select download tab, choose OS scroll down to the bottom of page to expand the Manual link and download the User Manual which will explain how to enable virtualization in one of the chapters related to BIOS settings.

Asus P8P67LE mobo

Edit: If applicable first switch from EZ mode menu to advanced mode menu in your Bios then from pages 69 and 70 of the user manual from the link I posted above - Select the advanced tab (3rd fom left) select CPU configuration and under Intel Virtualization Technology select (Enabled)
 
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My own abomination, I call it the Money Pit
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Intel i7 2600K @ 3.40 GHz
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ASUS Sabertooth P67
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LG Super Multi Blue Internal Blu-ray Disk Rewriter - BH10LS30
6x2 HDMI Switcher (6 inputs, 2 outputs) so I can send the output of my Cable Box, Roku, or any my 4 computers to either my TV or Monitor separately or simultaneously.

Dang! Overlooked this in both my manual and the interface, until you explicitly pointed it out. There' a SCROLL BAR that I ignored. Interestingly, after XP mode was reinstalled, with virtualization still disabled in the BIOS, it worked.

Later, when virtualization was ENabled, XP mode didn't work until it was again reinstalled. This hints that install of that feature overrides whatever the BIOS indicates. Flashing the BIOS disabled the feature (the default). Sheeesh. ^_^
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7
Glad to hear my link helped you use XP mode borate and yes a BIOS flash will set ALL user adjustments to back to factory default values and clear any saved profiles as well.

Before I update BIOS (only when it resolves an issue or improves stability) I will make a note of any changes that were made so they can be restored easily after updating BIOS.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
My own abomination, I call it the Money Pit
OS
Windows 10 Pro x 2/Windows 11 Home
CPU
Intel i7 2600K @ 3.40 GHz
Motherboard
ASUS Sabertooth P67
Memory
Corsair Vengeance 16GB DDR3 1600MHz CL8 Dual Channel Kit
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA GeForce RTX 3080 XC3 ULTRA GAMING 10GB GDDR6X
Sound Card
Onboard Realtek or Nvidia High Definition Audio (HDMI)
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung JS7000 50" SUHD TV or Samsung 27" FHD 60Hz 8ms GTG V
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080
Hard Drives
1 x Samsung 870 EVO 250 GB SSD (Windows 10 Pro), 1 x Samsung 850 EVO 250 GB SSD (Windows 10 Pro)
PSU
Corsair AX860 - 860W Modular Power Supply
Case
Phanteks Enthoo Luxe Full Tower Case - Black
Cooling
CORSAIR Hydro Series H150i PRO RGB 360mm Liquid CPU Cooler
Keyboard
Logitech K830 Illuminated Living-Room Keyboard
Mouse
Logitech MX Anywhere 2S Wireless Mouse
Internet Speed
100 Mbps
Antivirus
ESET Internet Security
Browser
Latest Version Of Firefox & Microsoft Edge Chromium Stable
Other Info
LG Super Multi Blue Internal Blu-ray Disk Rewriter - BH10LS30
6x2 HDMI Switcher (6 inputs, 2 outputs) so I can send the output of my Cable Box, Roku, or any my 4 computers to either my TV or Monitor separately or simultaneously.
...yes a BIOS flash will set ALL user adjustments to back to factory default values and clear any saved profiles as well.

Before I update BIOS (only when it resolves an issue or improves stability) I will make a note of any changes that were made so they can be restored easily after updating BIOS.

Wise advice. And though BIOS updating has gotten more reliable and easier I share your apparent caution on not performing it unless necessary. I vaguely recall a manufacturer mention that advocated a cautionary approach, as flashing can result in nasty problems.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7
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