Hardware Assisted Virtualization Bios 🚀
By default, many consumer motherboards ship with hardware virtualization . This is a security and compatibility choice (legacy software can conflict with VT-x). Therefore, you must manually enable it in your system’s firmware (BIOS or UEFI).
"Hardware-Assisted Virtualization" in the BIOS is a feature that allows virtualization software (like VMware, VirtualBox, or Hyper-V) to run more efficiently and securely by leveraging specific hardware capabilities built into the CPU. This feature, often referred to as Intel VT-x or AMD-V, depending on the processor architecture (Intel or AMD), provides several key benefits: hardware assisted virtualization bios

