I have just got a generic USB-hdmi adapter , I have plugged it in and it is searching for a driver, which the device did not come with , Where can i down load one ? , I have no manufacturer name on the product or the packaging.Device manager recognises it but says there is no driver
MiniTool OEM program enable partners like hardware / software vendors and relative technical service providers to embed MiniTool software with their own products to add value to their products or services and expand their market.
Yet, USB to HDMI adapters are not always workable for some users, especially after they upgrading their operating system (OS) to the latest Windows 11. The most probable cause is that the old USB to HDMI adapter driver does not support the new system. That is to say, your current driver for USB to HDMI is outdated, damaged, or even missing.
Another way to update HDMI to USB driver is to perform Windows update to update necessary drivers. It you fail to update the target device driver, you can navigate to Start > Settings > Windows Update > Advanced options > Optional updates to check whether the desired driver update is there or not.
Finally, you are able to rely on a professional device driver updating or downloading program to help you find, download, and even install the target hardware/firmware driver. There are official and third-party tools available.
The new and powerful Windows 11 will bring you many benefits. At the same time, it will also bring you some unexpected damages such as data loss. Thus, it is strongly recommended that you back up your crucial files before or after upgrading to Win11 with a robust and reliable program like MiniTool ShadowMaker, which will assist you to protect your increasing data automatically on schedules!
If the driver listed is not the right version or operating system, search our driver archive for the correct version. Enter SmartDisk MSUSB into the search box above and then submit. In the results, choose the best match for your PC and operating system.
You can update your drivers automatically with either the 7 days free trial or the Pro version of Driver Easy. It takes just 2 clicks, and you get full support and a 30-day money-back guarantee with the Pro version:
Note: The screenshots above have been taken from a Windows 10 operating system. If you are using Windows 11, please be aware that the visual appearance of your screen may vary slightly, but the steps to perform the task remain consistent.
Is this supported on recent versions of Ubuntu? The description says Windows-only, and that it doesn't work on Mac, but makes no mention of Linux. There's also not any mention of a manufacturer. I'm hoping someone here will recognise it and know whether it works...
This driver is tested on Ubuntu 14 LTS as well as some Androidplatforms with kernel version 3.10.x. This driver source might notcompile on newer kernels (eg. 4.0 or above) because of the fast-movingAPI changes in the mainstream kernel. You might need to adapt it foryour own use.
This issue indicates that there is no support for newer kernels right now. So if you aren't using Ubuntu 14.04 anymore, you'd have to wait for someone to port it (or do it yourself). There is also a reddit where a user claims he got it to work on Ubuntu 18.04 Alpha 2, but didn't provide any further information.
From my own experience, it works well for office use or browsing the internet. In general, everything where the display output is mostly static. You can watch videos, but you'll notice visible artifacts because of the high compression that is needed to be able to transfer the images over (relatively slow) USB3.0. You can't really play 3D games.
The device you linked to uses FrescoLogic hardware. Although most sellers won't include that information in the description, they often provide links to drivers. In your case, they linked to a file called FL2000-2.1.33788.0.exe which indicates it uses a FrescoLogic FL2000 chip.
The latest Microsoft Windows 10 Creators Update (a.k.a. Redstone2 or RS2) includes a new USB Audio 2.0 class driver, usbaudio2.sys. This driver is an alternative to supplier-provided drivers for USB DACs.
I've tried running a few of my USB DACs with this OS and driver and they all seem to work properly, though unlike many supplier-provided drivers, the MS USB Audio 2.0 class driver does not appear to expose any user controls, such as buffer size. When running a USB DAC with this inbox driver, I noticed there is an extra USB endpoint device, typically named " DFU". For example, with my Cambridge Audio DACMagic XS, a "CA DFU" device shows up in Device Manager with a yellow bang. I'm pretty sure this is a USB endpoint intended to support firmware updates (DFU = device firmware update) and can be safely ignored, though having a perpetual yellow bang device in Device Manager is a nuisance.
Using the Microsoft USB Audio 2.0 driver with my Holo Audio Spring DAC, I successfully played PCM up to 384K, and up to DSD256 DoP.. I tested with HQPlayer in WASAPI mode, since this driver has no ASIO functionality.
I've successfully completed the OS update manually for several PCs, but on my ultrabook, access to files on a mapped network drive over wireless got badly messed up. I rolled back to Win10 RS1 to restore the functionality. Not sure why only one PC was affected though.
But some things didn't work right. The track progress bar was stuck and didn't react, i.e. impossible to navigate within a track. The visualisations in Foobar2000 (VU meter, spectrum meter) didn't work.
I've got a CM6631A based USB>SPDIF unit based on USB class 2 and ik works perfect now. With the original driver I got nasty pops and clicks when switching between songs. When switching during a loud passage the buffer seems to be filled when switching so a loud click appears.
With this new driver it works perfect. In Event mode WASAPI I got the same problem you have. It does play but no visuals. In Push mode everything works fine. I already used push mode because event mode gave the loudest clicks/pops.
Oops spoke too soon! The "disable all sound effects" option has been removed (Control Panel > Sound > select Playback device > Properties > Enhancements tab) so it seems that Windows interferes (resamples) with your sound output and there is no way to avoid it! The only thing you can do is chose the same output format as your track to avoid resampling!
That's not a problem. These only apply to DirectSound. WASAPI bypasses all this. By the way. There is another tab now, which also mentions the Atmos. I see no problem with WASAPI playback. I've tested this at my DDC and it mentions the right samplerate of the file beeing played.
I was checking on my pc at work. There the button is gone. On my home laptop it is still there. Probably on some occasions the option is gone. However there is no need to worry. You can set the disable checkbox, but when there is no enhancement activated it does absolutely nothing.
Yes that's what I'm talking about and as I said I have a T+A DAC 8 DSD which Windows has decided shouldn't have the 'enhancements' tab, hence the problem. The tab does appear for other audio outputs on the same machine.
So the result is that Windows Creators Update forces my audio through its resampler which I don't want. It lists all the replay formats correctly up to 384KHz on the Advanced tab but only up to 192KHz on the Supported Formats tab.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but this is correct behavior AFAIK. 192kHz is supported via SPDIF. 384kHz is only supported via I2S connection. Possibly this is only possible via WASAPI. Could that be the case?
My NAD C388 takes SPDIF coax, so I'm limited to 192kHz already, but I don't see any problem with that. 16 bit 44.1kHz is fine for me. I feed the C388 exactly the source signal and it sounds absolutely great.
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