« Reply #15 on: November 22, 2014, 05:08:24 PM »
Indeed strange as it also shows it is enabled.
Perhaps something to try.
1] Remove avast (use also the removal tool)
2] Reboot
3] Reboot and enter the bios
4] Disable the hardware virtualization there
5] Boot in normal mode
6] Reboot and enter the bios
7] Enable virtualization
8] Boot
9 Install avast (custom install)
I'll try this as a last resort. I want to see if anyone sees something in the setup log that may shed light on this. Obviously, Avast is not correct. I would have thought that the clean reinstall would have done the trick after verifying that virtualization was enabled.
Logged
AMD A6-5350M APU with Radeon HD Graphics, 8.0GB RAM, Win7 Pro SP1 64bit, IE11
i7-3610QM 2.3GHZ, 8.0GB Ram, Nvidia GeForce GT 630M 2GB, Win7 Pro SP1 64bit, IE 11
Common to both: Avast Premium Security 19.7.2388, WinPatrol Plus, SpywareBlaster 5.5, Opera 12.18, Firefox 68.0.2, MBam Free, CCleaner