HoweverI have a question. I have at least 3 PCs in my house with the same Microsoft account on them. Presumably, all of them have digital license linked to this same Microsoft account. I wonder if there is a centralized place to check all my digital licensed connected to my Microsoft account?
As you have installed (and activated) Windows 10 on 3 PCs,Microsoft now holds in its activation database threedigital licenses for each of the computers by their hardware.Upon reinstalling Windows 10 on any of them, activation willbe immediate once Windows gets in touch with the Microsoft servers,no matter which account was used to login, Microsoft account orlocal account.
There is no connection between your Microsoft account and itsstored digital licenses, if none of these licenses was everinstalled on the current device.Go
toaccount.microsoft.com/devicesto see a list of all the devices associated with your Microsoft account.
Audacity is already receiving a digital signal whatsoever the source is.
You have the option of doing the conversion with the sound card (when you use the line-in), or using an interface like the UCA222.
My son has just made me aware that his high school owns a dozen National Instruments Digital Electronics FPGA boards but they have never been able to get them to work or actually use them in curriculum. It seems that he has let his instructor know that I've worked with Xilinx FPGAs for over 10 years and now everyone is counting on me to get these boards working. The issue seems to be the USB driver. Following the User manual, I tried DEFB2012_5_2.exe which simply refused to run on this Win 10 x64 machine. DEFB_4_3.exe ran but complained that LabView components weren't installed and would not continue. Could someone please tell me how to install ONLY the USB driver so that we can upload bit files using IMPACT? In terms of a school budget, the investment they have in these boards is not insignificant. Thank you.
I am attaching a screen grab from that web page showing the exact board. However, following the link that says "Purchase the NI Digital Electronics FPGA Board" takes me to a different product, the ELVIS II, and the PCB component of the ELVIS II is not the same board at all.
"You can use LabVIEW FPGA or Xilinx ISE tools to program the FPGA on the NI Digital Electronics Board. Use of the NI Digital Electronics Board does require a driver, which you can find by following the driver download link in the technical resources section above."
In the mean time I think the drivers you were using are incompatible or the wrong drivers. There techncially is a driver for iMPACT and one for LabVIEW so I think you might've been using the LabVIEW one.
Hi,I;ve just found this page after months of searching on and off. i am in a similar situation, and have also struggled to get the board working with either windows 7 or windows 10 64 bit. Is there a driver available for either or win10/7 that I can install without having the labview software installed. My college has 16 FPGA boards and most are still in the cellophane after five years.
Just as a side note I also found some info regarding Xilinx Dev boards not working with Win10, and tried to back door one of their drivers in instead and had a little more success. I managed to get a green light on the dev board near the USB port, but Multisim couldn't see it still. I think that there will be a possibility of a 64 bit driver, but we need someone to drag it out of what is already there.
I'd like to see/try the information you mention. Can you please provide a link? I am not familiar with Multisim (familiar with ISim and ModelSim only) but for me right now the critical thing is to be able to load FPGA images though the USB. If you have a driver that enumerates the USB (presumably this is the green light you mention) then I'd want to try it with Impact for sure.
I had to go into device manager find the unknown hardware and install via have disk and then untick compatible only or something along those lines. I managed to get the green light un but not recognised, and also got one that caused mayhem as the device kept disappearing and reappearing every few seconds. It also complainee about USBII.
The LabVIEW 2015 DE FPGA driver should install the necessary components to use the board with Xilinx tools on WINDOWS 7, this will not work on any newer operating system as the driver was developed prior to the release of Windows 8 and 10.
The difficulty you may face here is that Xilinx ISE tool is officially only supported on Windows 7 and below. So while I believe this will work (and it will install unlike the DE FPGA driver link above) for Windows 8 and 10, you may continue to face some issues.
Now are you all looking to program the FPGA using an HDL, Multisim, or LabVIEW? If you are just using an HDL, you should be all set to go and program in the dev environment you were planning on using. Multisim is NI's circuit design and simulation tool which does include a complete library of graphical digital components. A digital circuit can be built using the graphical logic gates in Multisim then downloaded directly to the FPGA without having to first learn VHDL or Verilog. It is fairly popular with introductory digital logic classes and we can help you through setting that up as well if you are interested.
For anyone else who might stumble upon this page, I want to make sure you all are aware that while the DE FPGA board is still supported and sold, it was developed a number of years ago and has recently been replaced by the Digital System Development Board (DSDB) which uses a Zynq 7020 and has many more periphrials to program than the DE FPGA. So I know this isn't helpful to the current issue but anyone researching whether they would like to purchase more DE FPGA boards, I recommend looking at the DSDB instead.
I'm running Windows 11x64 Pro (22H2) on a Surface Pro 8 i7 running at 3 GHz with 32 GB RAM and 1 TB SSD. Unfortunately. Digital Photo Pro (4.17.10) takes 10-15 minutes to load, and even then goes "out to lunch" whenever I try to do anything with it. At first I thought that might be due to using OneDrive for many of my files, but when I changed the default to use a local drive the problem continues. Additionally, when I try to change the directories in the "Preferences General", I see only the directories in the OneDrive Desktop folder. I like DPP; I've used it since it first came out, but if it no longer works on Windows I may have to use something else. Anyone able to get this latest version to work?
Edited to add: If I revert to 4.12.20.3, it opens promptly, snappily. However, I can't edit directory paths under Preferences. I can't manually type a new path, can't paste the new path into the field, and the "Browse" button only brings up the "Desktop" folder in OneDrive. This last (showing only the "Desktop" folder) appears to be a Windows 11-related bug, as on another machine running Windows 10 Pro, I see the full directory tree. Still can't type into the fields though.
Version 4.17.10 of Digital Photo Professional 4 is compatible with Windows 11 and it should be able to access folders on the computer that haven't been protected or hidden. Since the computer is only showing the One Drive folders it may be good to check the security on the other folders on the computer. If you need assistance with checking that you will need to contact Microsoft.
There are a few things that can cause Digital Photo Professional to slow down. One is if it is accessing cloud or external drives. It takes longer for it to access those types of drives, so we recommend using folders that are on the computer itself. One other thing that can cause it to be slower is if there is a large number of photos in the folder. Typically it runs best when there are 100 or less photos in the folder you are currently viewing.
Digital Photo Professional 4 version 4.12.20.3 was released before Windows 11 came out, so that version might not work correctly on Windows 11. That is likely why that version is unable to use the Browse function.
Unfortunately, the default configuration on first install for DPP is to look in the user's Pictures library (C:\users\%USERNAME%\Pictures), which Microsoft urges people to set to back up to OneDrive. So you can't even start the app the first time without waiting a quarter hour or more if you're using OneDrive to back up your important files.
The issue with setting Preferences isn't a case of file permissions. DPP sees all my folders; I can choose any of them from the main Folders tab in the application. However, when I open the Preferences dialog under the Tools window in Windows 11 (or Windows 10) I cannot enter (by typing) a path to the Startup Folder. When I click on the Browse button to select a different folder it only shows one OneDrive folder, the Desktop folder. It doesn't allow me to select any of my other OneDrive folders, let alone local folders on the computer. Accessing the same OneDrive account on my Windows 10 machine, I have free run of ALL my OneDrive folders and ALL my local drives, whether fixed or removable. This happens on 4.17.10 on Windows 10, but not Windows 11. It's the Tools Preferences browse feature that is broken under Windows 11. If you allowed manual entry of the desired path this would be an annoying, but not critical, problem. But under neither Windows 10 nor Windows 11 can I type in a specified folder for t he startup folder. Similarly, I cannot specify, by typing, a Destination directory path for Temporary Files. In Windows 11 here too the Browse button only brings me to my OneDrive Desktop folder.
My download procedure, using Breeze Systems' Downloader Pro, is to create a new folder every 100 images, a habit I picked up back in my D60 days when Canon automatically created a new folder in camera every 100 images. As an aside, may I say that the recent (and now I hope abandoned) starting of new folders automatically either on a daily or monthly basis was a terrible idea. I note that at least my M50s and SX70 don't do this, but the M3, M5 and G9x do, and having to go in monthly to tweak the folder name is a real nuisance.
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