I'd consider that was pretty certain. Unless it's needed to run Excel most people will have no idea what VT-x is.Bill. wrote: The person did not answer my question. Maybe the person didn't understand my question or maybe the person doesn't understand Virtualization.
You can try again to get a straight answer from them, but I don't know how long you want to keep flogging this dead horse. If the BIOS supports VT-d then it must support virtualization, whether or not it has an "Enable Virtualization" option. It could never provide VT-d support without it. So if you like you can just turn on VT-d: if it fails (because VT-x is not turned on) then you have grounds for complaint.