![]() ![]() ![]() Your GPU, for instance has no Win10 support from NVidia. *Microsoft, btw, when quoting min spec, fails to recognise that drivers may no longer be avalibale for the hardware. Even moving the VBox window from the Macbook screen to the external screen and back shows that on the external screen, it is fast immediately, on the built-in screen it is slow - even for non fullscreen mode. This will allow your host to actually operate in the HT cores & the VM to grab the primary thread in each core. The VBox guests are as smooth as you would expect. In a VM, you will achieve maximum performance in the VM itself by allocating the same number of processors as your CPU physically possesses. You may be able to squeeze a little more performance out of it if you run it in Boot Camp but you are really never going to see comfortable operating speeds on that hardware. Windows 10, even more than High Sierra, is not designed to run from an old-style spinning hard drive, but from SSD. You will need to find or build a Darwin kext (kernel extension) for whatever video VirtualBox uses. Every last little thing has an animation. I know your machine is technically above minimum spec for Windows 10*, but as you're running it in a VM rather than natively you can expect it to run considerably slower. VirtualBox does not have optimized graphics drivers for MacOS, and MacOS is graphics heavy. ![]()
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