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Will your new Windows 7 PC support XP Mode?

section: windows, for your questions: KezNews forum, 4.2.2010

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Last May, a few months before Windows 7 was released to manufacturing, I looked at the then-current crop of CPUs available for business PC buyers and identified a potential sticking point.




Some of the most popular Intel CPUs available at the time didn’t support hardware-assisted virtualization (HAV). That made them incompatible with the newly announced Windows Virtual PC and Windows XP Mode, a crucial compatibility feature in Windows 7. (For details about Intel CPU support, see “How many Intel CPUs will fail the XP Mode test in Windows 7?” For a closer look at Windows XP Mode, see this video demo.)

The problem is that Windows Virtual PC requires hardware-assisted virtualization (Intel VT for Intel CPUs, AMD-V for AMD processors). And the late-2008/early-2009 CPU lineup from Intel was notoriously inconsistent in its support for VT.

So, is that issue still a sticking point for corporate customers considering a Windows 7 upgrade in 2010? My quick survey of the current PC market says you’re much less likely to run into virtualization problems today, but at most online shopping sites you’ll have a hard time finding details about virtualization support for specific models. Here’s a recap:

Dell’s lineup of Intel-powered business PCs specifically identifies them as being VT-capable. The budget Vostro line, for example, includes the latest versions of Intel’s E5400, E7500, and Q8200. On Dell’s website, the specs explicitly list VT support for all of those CPUs.

Likewise, Dell’s low-end Vostro notebooks (with starting prices of $649 or less) include SU3500 and SU7300 processors, both of which include VT support. The lowest of the low-end Vostro notebooks includes a Celeron M 743 processor, which lacks VT support. But it’s sold with Ubuntu Linux, not with Windows.

In the higher-end lines, Dell has the AMD-powered OptiPlex 740, which doesn’t require any research. All modern AMD CPUs with the exception of the very-low-end Sempron line support hardware-assisted virtualization. The Intel-powered OptiPlex series also supports VT in all models except those powered by ancient Celeron CPUs–and those models come with Windows Vista Home Basic, not Windows 7. Dell’s website makes it clear when an OptiPlex model includes VT support

Over at HP’s business site, it wasn’t so easy to tell whether a specific model supports VT. The lowest-end Compaq desktop machines on HP’s website all include Intel Pentium processors in the E5000 and E6000 series. If you get an E6300 CPU, you’re good to go, as all Intel parts with that label support VT. The E5300 is more problematic, however, because Intel redesigned it last year to add VT support. Some E5300s support HAV, others don’t. Caveat emptor.

source: blogs.zdnet.com

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Comments(4)

avoid intel

By buy amd on 05.02.2010 - 04:02
again... why we should all just buy amd and tell intel where they can go!

intel s*cks

By intel su*ck my di*k on 05.02.2010 - 06:02
intel is holy shitty product. just go get an amd and you'll be fine.

AMD fanboys

By Ericko on 05.02.2010 - 20:02
amd fanboys...

AMD Sockers

By Intel FTW on 05.02.2010 - 23:02
this article is written by a amd fanboy...
my 3 year old cpu supports hardware virtualization...

this is just some crap written by a amd sockers


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