In this post, I will walk you through what virtualization technology actually is, why you need it, and the exact steps to enable it on any UEFI motherboard (Intel, AMD, ASUS, MSI, Gigabyte, Dell, Lenovo). Before diving into the BIOS, let’s understand the what and why .
Now that virtualization is on, check out my next tutorial: “Setting up your first Windows 11 Virtual Machine using Hyper-V” – coming next week. Share this post with a friend who keeps complaining that Docker won’t start! uefi bios virtualisierung aktivieren
Get-ComputerInfo -property "HyperV*" If it says HyperVRequirementVirtualizationFirmwareEnabled : True , you have succeeded. You enabled it in the UEFI, but Task Manager still shows "Disabled". Here is why: In this post, I will walk you through
On Linux, verify with:
In German, this process is called While it sounds like advanced techno-magic, it is actually a straightforward toggle in your motherboard’s firmware. However, because Microsoft enabled Hyper-V by default on many modern Windows 11 installations, and motherboard manufacturers often ship with virtualization off for compatibility, you need to manually intervene. Share this post with a friend who keeps