Have sent this to our engineering teams and seeing if it can be implemented as the default EQ by the Realtek team and pushed out as a driver update. But easy enough to do on your own via the links above. It does pretty noticeably improve audio quality, but venturing into subjective territory there.
As mentioned in several of my previous posts we're aware of the issue some people are reporting around left speaker static/crackle/interference/etc. Appreciate your help in providing info to aid in diagnosing and reproducing. Some have reported it going away/improving with the latest Audio drivers, others have said this has no effect. While this is arguably an issue of subjective severity, we do take your concerns seriously and are doing our best to address. To that end, we have finally been able to reproduce this and I'll share more on resolution options as I can.
Driver overall is still being worked on, there's a bug AMD is trying to address before we can release. No updates to share on AFMF beyond what was shared last time other than we continue to look for ways to support on our device but unable to guarantee eventual implementation.
Keymapping, Gyro, Charge Limiting for Main Unit battery (seeing if we can include controller charge limiting as well), UI overhaul, completing custom TDP implementation (sTTP/fTTP connected to Space), Per-game profiles, improvement to driver updates GUI, quick settings enhancements, further deadzone optimizations (including diagonals).
Additional Legion Go accessories will likely come in waves starting around middle of the year, you can keep an eye on official PR announcements for more information but there are several in the works.
Disclaimer: The details provided herein are intended as a courtesy update and do not serve as a binding commitment or warranty. Lenovo cannot guarantee the accuracy or timeliness of the information and reserves the right to modify product and service plans at any time. We are not liable for reliance on the projected timelines or features, which are subject to change based on various business needs and product development considerations.
I've got a few questions, would appreciate your response
Are you planning to include an option to set / change VRAM from within Legion Space rather than it being only in the BIOS?
Also, for convenience, do you intend to include the TDP value on the Legion Go profiles in Legion Space? (say performance marked as 20 TDP, Balanced as 15 TDP, Battery saving as 10 TDP). I bet it would help some users.
Finally, not sure if it is possible from within Legion Space, but I'm hoping there's a way to bypass the battery when on power on long gaming sessions to preserve the battery (currently only possible on BIOS & it gets annoying to constantly jump into BIOS to enable / disable it).
I have heard each of the individual controllers have their own gyro sensors, however they are currently completely unusable, is this true? If so, are there any future plans to unlock these gyro sensors?
Hey, can you at least release the latest AMD driver without the AFMF, it has some game fixes so why not let us use it?
I mean you need to change something to make it run on the legion go, so maybe you can do that , otherwise we get stuck on old driver
Thanks for the update Ben!
Before releasing a new stable BIOS, is it possible to add some features that allow the LED power button to light Green if the battery is fully charged?
This will really help me who likes charging LeGo while turned off.
If we can't know what percentage of the battery, at least we know when the battery is fully charged with a Green LED sign that lights up when the battery is full.
Thanks
I have used a wattage meter while charging recently, and found out that while charging, it draws 62W, drops down to 12W when it is almost full & eventually drops to 0 when full. So, it is safe to say that keeping the power cable attached while the device is off won't hurt the battery health. However, it is indeed useful to have some sort of an indication that the charge is complete.
A disk driver, also known as a disk controller or disk interface, is a device or software that allows your computer to communicate with and control a disk drive. It acts as an intermediary between the computer's operating system and the physical disk drive.
You need a disk driver because it enables your computer to read from and write to disk drives. Without a disk driver, your computer couldn't access the data stored on disks, such as hard disk drives (HDDs) or solid state drives (SSDs).
When you want to read or write data to a disk drive, you interact with the disk drive through the operating system. The disk driver receives requests from the operating system and translates them into commands that the disk driver understands. It manages tasks like seeking data on the disk, buffering data, and handling error correction.
A disk driver can work with various types of disk drives, including hard disk drives (HDDs), solid state drives (SSDs), floppy disk drives, compact disc/ digital versatile disc (CD/DVD) drives, and even newer storage technologies like nonvolatile memory express (NVMe) drives. The specific disk driver you use depends on the type of disk drive you have and the interface it uses.
If you don't have the correct disk driver installed, your computer may not be able to recognize or access the disk drive properly. It may show up as an unrecognized device or not appear at all. Without the appropriate driver, you won't be able to read from or write to the disk drive, limiting its functionality.
Yes, you can update or replace your disk driver if a newer version becomes available or if you're experiencing issues with your current driver. To update a disk driver, you can download the latest driver for your specific disk drive model. Replacing a disk driver typically involves physically installing a new driver or using a different software driver that is compatible with your disk drive.
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