Jorge,

                I can help with item 'a' but there are others on here better 
qualified to answer your other two questions than I.

        I encountered this issue when I introduced an Intel processor to the 
arrangement (it doesn't appear to crop up with AMD processors). Virtualisation 
needs to be turned on in the BIOS, the default setting is often to have it 
turned off. Then the host will willingly accept 64-bit VM configurations.


Regards,
Martin

-----Original Message-----
From: jorge [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: 12 August 2016 14:53
To: [email protected]
Subject: [VBox-users] Some help

Good morning:

I'm new and thank you to accept me in this e-mail list.

I've used VirtualBox since several years, but I can't use it well yet.

I have three questions that hope you would help with them:

a) Since last version 4... of VirtualBox ( I guess...I think ), we can't run a 
Virtual machine with an imagen (.ISO) of Operative System in 64 bytes, because 
we can only choose system of 32 bytes (GNU/Linux, BSD, windows, etc.). How can 
we run an .ISO of 64 Bytes in a Virtual Machine ? The main problem is that some 
GNU / Linux Distribution have only version in 64 Bytes, and others communicate 
that in one year more or less only have 64 Bytes.

b) I have a PC with a motherboard with a little GPU integrated. But I installed 
another GPU (Graphic board) in it with 2 GB of memory.
However, when I configure a virtual machine, it only recognize the little 
memory (128 mb of integrated graphic board), and not recognize 2 GB of memory 
of not integrated GPU. How can I do to get recognize 2 GB ?

c) I have a Virtual Machine with Ubuntu 16.04 LTS running. I installed in 
VirtualBox its extension pack. I put a USB flash memory into one port of the 
PC. In USB configuration of Virtual Machine (VM), I activate the filter but not 
checked (Selected), but when I run the VM I can't access the flash memory. How 
I can do it ?

Thanks, and regards,

--
Atentamente,

Jorge Rodríguez


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What NetFlow Analyzer can do for you? Monitors network bandwidth and traffic
patterns at an interface-level. Reveals which users, apps, and protocols are 
consuming the most bandwidth. Provides multi-vendor support for NetFlow, 
J-Flow, sFlow and other flows. Make informed decisions using capacity 
planning reports. http://sdm.link/zohodev2dev
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