Nfc Card Reader Windows

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Trudi Miranda

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Aug 4, 2024, 5:29:54 PM8/4/24
to guigrovylul
Iwent into Programs & Features in the Control Panel (or just search "programs and features" in the Start menu) and opened it up. Then, in the list of all the programs, I scrolled down towards the bottom where all the Bootcamp drivers are (meaning the Windows Driver Packages). I selected the Apple SD Card Reader driver (if you can't find it, just search "Apple SD" in the search bar at the top right), and then clicked Uninstall/Change. Then I clicked Yes when the confirmation window appeared. Then I tried inserting an SD card into the reader, and it worked! It automatically installed a separate driver called "Broadcom SD SCSI Disk Device.

Tried almost everything i could, reinstalled Windows, reinstalled Bootcamp drivers, uninstalled Apple SD Card drivers/Broadcom SD Card drivers, tried manual installation of SD Card drivers, but no luck.


You should take a look at that discussion if you're experiencing this issue yes. Previous to windows 10.1 I was experiencing the SD card dropping off after sleep, but after Windows updated I am now experiencing this on every boot:


If I uninstall that unknown device, it resintalls just like that again. I've tried updating bootcamp drivers to the latest ones available several times. I've tried the suggestion in the post above to try without the apple SD card driver. None of them work.


For over three years now (see date of first post on first link below), a wide range of Macbook users have reported severe problems with the bootcamp SD card driver, we think for a particular Broadcom chipset. The issue got progressively worse with the release of Windows 10, and now with the Windows 10 Anniversary Edition (1607 release) the SD Card is inoperable: on boot we receive Set Address Failed (see last link for latest post) and no known workaround exists. Please see the following links for a large variety of users posting detailed reports on this issue:


Boot into bootcamp on a Macbook pro Retina (other users have found the problem in Macbook Airs also - see posts) which uses the affected broadcom chipset, running Windows 10 Anniversary Edition. Try to access content stored on an SD Card using the inbuilt SD Card reader.


See the below configuration of my mac, see also all included forum links for many other hardware configurations where this occurs and the general conclusion that this affects the Broadcom SD-card driver chipset


See all the links mentioned. Note the number of users affected, the diversity of their hardware, the amount of time that has expired since reports came in and the perceived lack of faith from users in a resolution due to Apple and Microsoft (for whom users are both paid customers) not seeking to resolve the issue. Hence I would suggest this is very urgent.


Right click on each of the drives 1-4 and assign a Drive Letter. Now place your SD card in the correct slot and an a pop up for auto play will show. Now you reader works and will also show when you open COMPUTER it will show them as removable drives with proper drive letters. It took me several days to figure out after no help from HP or internet search. So when found the drives listed I just right clicked saw assign drive and it worked. Hope a lot of people searching on internet find this reply so that it will help them get there card reader working again under Windows 7 because even there tech's don't have an answer. Well good luck because this will work!!!


click on start proceed to click on control panel , then click on system and security once you click on that look for system under system click on device manager, once in device manager click on disck drive you should see generic multi-card usb device... once you click on that click driver then disable it and re-enable it.. the drive should then be recognizable.


Glad the site certificate got updated. I was concerned. Anyway, I have used a Sony XQD USB adapter since 2018 when I got my nikon D850. Never a problem using it to transfer images to my computer. When I got back from atrip in early September, I found that the computer does not even acknowledge my plugging it into the USB port. Nothing. Looking into the File Manager, the device does not show up. Being a pack rat, I bought two back in 2018 so got the new, unused one. Same behavior, not acknowledged at all.


There is a Windows tool called "Hardware Troubleshooter" which may help. This article refers to SD cards, which can have a similar problem in Windows 10. Windows may not recognize the file system of the XQD card, in shich case it wouldn't show up at all.


Before you throw out the card, try this. Attach the empty card reader to your computer. It should recognize it as a drive with a letter like D or E. Then enter the XQD card. The drive letter should change if the computer recognizes the card. If the computer does not recognize the card, press on the card to unload it. Then load it again. And see if the computer recognizes the card.


With my Sony XQD card reader attached to a win 10 laptop, I attach the card reader first to make sure the computer recognizes it. When it does, it gives me the drive letter. Then I put in the XQD card. Sometimes I get instant recognition. Other times I have to press on the card to unload and reload it to get the computer to recognize it.


Had all of the above happen to me with USB keys, the drive letter conflict is a regular annoyance that should have been fixed 20 years ago, screwing up the partition table so badly that Windows can no longer see the card/drive is a total showstopper.


Since the camera can write to the card and when you use a USB cable to attach the camera to your computer you can download the images from the card to the computer, I doubt the problem is the card. I suspect it may be the the card reader.


Without the adapter plugged in, right click on START and select Device Manager. Expand Disk drives. Now plug in the adapter without a card in it. Do the list of disk drives in Device Manager change? If so, the new entry is your adapter. Remove the adapter, insert the card and plug the adapter back in. Do you see the adapter with card in list of drives in Device Manager? If so, on to the next step. Right click on START and select Disk Management. The Disk Management window is divided in an upper and lower half. If you do not see the card in the upper half, scroll down in the lower half and look for it. If you find it in the lower half, right click on it and assign a letter - pick one the system will not normally assign - say M or N. All should be good.


If you still do not see the card, first make sure the card is inserted in the card reader correctly. Last time I had this happen, I had inserted the card backward (I am using an SD card and reader). Of course there was not card; there are no contacts on that side of the card. If the card is inserted correctly, then in Device Manager, right click on the adapter and chose Uninstall, disconnect the adapter, and after a minute plug it back in. Windows should reinstall the device and drivers.


Seriously, Windows disk management, with only some 20-odd letters that can be assigned (some are reserved) was barely acceptable in the DOS days, now, with multiple partitions, external hard drives, USB keys, memory cards etc, it's just a liability. Yesterday, I add to add a new network share to a computer at work, I think my remaining choices were K,L and Z...


I have a similar intermittent issue with a Renesas-chipped add in USB 3 card. Sometimes it just refuses to acknowledge an external USB-to-SATA HDD dock. The only fix I've found to date is to remove the USB 3.0 ports in Device Manager, then click on "Look for Hardware Changes" and let the drivers automatically re-install.


X, Y and Z are the default assignments for network shares, IIRC. Never seen a computer with drive letters down at R, S, T, U or V though. C'mon, 20 plus partitions or drives is a bit excessive, you must admit. And you can hide system-reserved partitions by deleting their drive letter.


Works computer (so largely outside of my control), connected to a bunch of CNC machines. The CNC software can only cope with mapped drive letters, not network locations accessed via \\server\directory\file (because it dates from the DOS era too). Each CNC has 3 partitions mapped as shared drives, combine that with a few partitions on the PC, a few other network shares, some USB keys with hard assigned letters because Windows can't see both of them at the same time, a share for Virtualbox and it fills up pretty fast.


A memory card (SD card) is a widely used storage medium in devices such as digital cameras, smartphones, and computers. Sometimes, you may encounter issues with memory cards, such as the card reader not detecting the memory card or errors occurring during reading or writing. In this article, we will provide some common troubleshooting methods to help you resolve these issues.


There are several different types of memory cards, including standard SD cards, miniSD cards, and microSD cards. Before using a memory card, please ensure that your device supports the specific memory card format. You can check the supported memory card formats on the ASUS product specification page on our official website or in the product user manual. If you are unsure how to download the user manual, please refer to this article: How to Search for and Download User Manuals.


If the card reader slot is clogged with dust, try cleaning it to see if the problem can be resolved. When cleaning the memory card slot, make sure to turn off the device and disconnect the power cord. You can use a commercially available cleaning brush or an air blower to remove dust from the slot.

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