Hyper-V now has VMs with batteries
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 nice if you use hyperv instead of virtual box. useless on servers. 
 nothing wrong, just a question: which is the expected audience of hyper-v?!
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 @matteo-nunziati said in Hyper-V now has VMs with batteries: nice if you use hyperv instead of virtual box. useless on servers. 
 nothing wrong, just a question: which is the expected audience of hyper-v?!Just as with KVM, it’s available in the base OS so people use it on their desk tops for their virtualization instead of a type 2 virtualization system. This has nothing to do with the target market and everything to do with it being a good feature for the users specified in the article. 
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 This is the reasoning for exposing a battery within a VM.  
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 While this is useful (windows 10 hyper-v users) it almost seems like a silly approach thing to have to do at all. I do see the value, but it's protecting people from themselves. 
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 @dustinb3403 said in Hyper-V now has VMs with batteries: While this is useful (windows 10 hyper-v users) it almost seems like a silly approach thing to have to do at all. I do see the value, but it's protecting people from themselves. I do full screen VM work on my Fedora laptop all the time. So this is definitely something that is useful 
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 @jaredbusch said in Hyper-V now has VMs with batteries: @dustinb3403 said in Hyper-V now has VMs with batteries: While this is useful (windows 10 hyper-v users) it almost seems like a silly approach thing to have to do at all. I do see the value, but it's protecting people from themselves. I do full screen VM work on my Fedora laptop all the time. So this is definitely something that is useful Isn't this for Hyper-V only and not the VM's running on KVM or anything else. I assumed (probably shouldn't have) that VM's automatically showed a battery if on a laptop based Hypervisor and that just Hyper-V was missing this functionality to tell the guest what type of host they were running on. 
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 @dustinb3403 said in Hyper-V now has VMs with batteries: I do see the value, but it's protecting people from themselves. Like so much of what we do today. 
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 @dustinb3403 said in Hyper-V now has VMs with batteries: @jaredbusch said in Hyper-V now has VMs with batteries: @dustinb3403 said in Hyper-V now has VMs with batteries: While this is useful (windows 10 hyper-v users) it almost seems like a silly approach thing to have to do at all. I do see the value, but it's protecting people from themselves. I do full screen VM work on my Fedora laptop all the time. So this is definitely something that is useful Isn't this for Hyper-V only and not the VM's running on KVM or anything else. I assumed (probably shouldn't have) that VM's automatically showed a battery if on a laptop based Hypervisor and that just Hyper-V was missing this functionality to tell the guest what type of host they were running on. Of course it is, but I was illustrating the point. 
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 @jaredbusch said in Hyper-V now has VMs with batteries: @dustinb3403 said in Hyper-V now has VMs with batteries: While this is useful (windows 10 hyper-v users) it almost seems like a silly approach thing to have to do at all. I do see the value, but it's protecting people from themselves. I do full screen VM work on my Fedora laptop all the time. So this is definitely something that is useful I agree... very useful. I live on a laptop with VMs on it. Now if the VMs behaved like they were on a laptop, even better. But only the OS does. 
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 @matteo-nunziati said in Hyper-V now has VMs with batteries: nice if you use hyperv instead of virtual box. useless on servers. 
 nothing wrong, just a question: which is the expected audience of hyper-v?!It's broad. The use case here is developers working from desktops and testing interactions with battery stats. 





