Imade a backup and restore on my new computer. After this completed, there came errors while booting (0xc000000f). I wnated to reinstall in windows and saw, the ssd is missing. cant access it in command prompt via troubleshooting. I can see the SSD in BIOS.
If this is a SATA SSD and the BIOS is configured for AHCI, then no driver is necessary; Microsoft's Windows 10 inbox drivers will handle this just fine. Similarly, a NVMe SSD mounted on the motherboard does not need any driver installed either; Microsoft's Windows 10 inbox driver will also handle this just fine.
Open the application and select "Everything" click on "Scan" to see the system and device information. By default, Intel SSU will take you to the "Summary View". Click on the menu where it says "Summary" to change to "Detailed View".
We have not heard back from you, so we will close this thread. Please take into consideration that there is always a risk of the OS getting some corrupt data and creating issues with different options and configurations. In this case, our recommendation is to check with Microsoft* for support on Windows* installation and possible corruption during it.
Intel does not verify all solutions, including but not limited to any file transfers that may appear in this community. Accordingly, Intel disclaims all express and implied warranties, including without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and non-infringement, as well as any warranty arising from course of performance, course of dealing, or usage in trade.
I had 10.04 installed on my Thinkpad r61 with Compiz Manager and life was great, until the machine took water damage. I bought an ASUS (X54H) since and am trying out 12.04, but the desktop just doesn't look right.
I will greatly appreciate your help. I want to use Linux more, but like I said video drivers appear to be my biggest concern. I have also tried 12.04 on my desktop PC, but again failed to configure video card, so switched back to Windows 7.
The Intel graphics driver is part of the xserver-xorg-video-intel driver package, which is installed on all Ubuntu systems by default. And since it isn't a proprietary driver package, it doesn't show up in jockey (aka the Hardware Drivers application).
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