According to this list at nvidia.com, it does. However, make sure the card has 256MB of on-board RAM (which appears to be the maximum for this card), as this is apparently the minimum needed for a lot of CUDA...
Thanks for the pics. I've done a bit more digging myself, and it would appear there are several people running M6400's who are using it almost solely for VM's, so it would appear they do indeed support hardware virtualization.
Is the E2E glossy display effectively an AG display with a piece of glass in front of it, or is it actually a different display ?
I'm not a big fan of the glossy displays due to the reflection from the screen, but if the displays are...
Does this actually enable it though, since on other Dell laptop models the BIOS allows you to enable/disable it, but the actual hardware virtualization always stays disabled ?
I've read that with some Dell laptops, the BIOS does not support virtualization, even though the CPU does.
Is this the case with the Precision M6400/M4400 (ie. can hardware virtualization be enabled in the BIOS of these laptops) ?