Hey Dylan,
Virtualization is technology that enables other programs (like VirtualBox, VMware, Hyper-V) to emulate hardware in order to run other operating systems in their own respective containers. This is essentially another computer you can make, but inside your own
computer in which it's emulating that hardware.
Hope this helps. If you're still confused on the subject, let me know as I'd be more than happy to clarify.
so even though i cant enable core isolation,is virtualization based security still protecting my pc to some extent? currently i disabled two settings,windows hypervisor platform,and one i probably dont need to enable since im not running a virtual machine
on my pc, virtual machine platform under turn on/off windows features in progams in control pannel to view this:
Hyper-V - Second Level Address Translation Extensions
Yes
Hyper-V - VM Monitor Mode Extensions Yes
Hyper-V - Virtualization Enabled in Firmware
Yes
Hyper-V - Data Execution Protection Yes
ive notice google chrome doesnt us as much cpu when its enabled also.