If you need a solution right now, you can either remove a line in the Android Studio Emulator’s source code and compile it yourself, or replace one file with a pre-compiled version someone made. Microsoft’s developers confirmed the problem is a bug related to XSAVE in the Hyper-V API on Windows 11, and Google and Microsoft are working to address the problem. Thankfully, a fix is already in development. I really love Windows 11 on the Surface Pro 8, but I’m having problems with the Android emulator and after hours of Google searching still haven’t found a really good solution, so I think I’ll switch back to Windows 10 for now, until it is fixed…□ #SurfacePro8 #Windows11 After checking something out, with most benchmarks it seems like the Ryzen 5 3500U is slightly more then 3 times as powerful then the Core i5, and even those integrated Vega 8 graphics are faster then my old. I just installed Windows 11 and the Android Emulator will not boot any image if Hyper-V is enabled, and it’s unusable if you turn off Hyper-V #xamarinforms #windows11 #fail #androidĪpparently AVD, the android emulator that comes with Android Studio, won’t boot on Windows 11, like at all, there’s no solution □ can this be a thing? Intel Core i5, 2nd gen Sandy Bridge, AMD Radeon 6630M, and Ive been livestreaming at 720p30 on it for a while with minimal framedrops. Computers running Windows 10, Linux, or macOS also are not affected by the bug. The issue is affecting PCs with either Intel or AMD processors, but emulators using the Hypervisor Driver for AMD processors instead of Hyper-V are unaffected. There are at least a few dozen reports online of the Android Emulator failing to start on Windows 11 ( via Mishaal Rahman on Twitter) when using Hyper-V, Microsoft’s native hypervisor in Windows.
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