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By using Vmware or by other means?
i would have to say no, but maybe in future
VMWare Workstation offers 3D-support for guests running Windows XP and above, and possibly for Linux and BSD. I don't know how well it works though. VirtualBox has a similar solution.

Xen offers full pass-though to the host GPU, but only runs on Linux hosts.
Post edited April 11, 2012 by Miaghstir
http://labs.vmware.com/publications/gpu-virtualization
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Miaghstir: VMWare Workstation offers 3D-support for guests running Windows XP and above, and possibly for Linux and BSD. I don't know how well it works though. VirtualBox has a similar solution.

Xen offers full pass-though to the host GPU, but only runs on Linux hosts.
That's what i need! My main operating system is Linux for more than half-decade and i fed up with dual booting. Until now i haven't got a powerful machine for virtualization. I recently bought a Sandy Bridge system with a GeForce GTX 560 Ti as graphic card. If it works, i will be great. Windows 7 on a workspace with games =)
Post edited April 11, 2012 by Paingiver
Parallels Desktop (Mac, non-free) and Xen (Linux, free but requires license) have good direct access to GPU implementations.

VirtualBox has "guest additions" for WDDM, Direct3D, and OpenGL support, but performance is awful.