[First of all, sorry for my bad English] What else can I do ? I have now gone through the Trobbelshooting section of the ArchWiki and other sides (everything that fits my problem) adapted the XML, but the error still remains. I mean Linux (fedora 32) shows the graphic cards correctly if it is installed in the same VM but not windows.
I also tried to repair windows, but after a while it only says that you have to reinstall it and then the driver installation starts all over again.
i removed the SLI adapter and tried again but with the same result. what really confuses me most is that fedora 32 recognizes both graphic cards and with the nvidia drivers can run without problems in SLI in the VM but not in windows.
Do you use geforce experience to install the drivers or do you download the drivers straight from nvidia website? I personally used the geforce experience to install the drivers and was able to do it that way.
Nice to meet u, I finally made a jump to Amd after all these years and i was finally able to get some really good hardware, I have this issue I cant solve. In my device manager I have this issue where it shows my rtx 3080 and a microsoft basic display driver adaptor with a yellow exclamation mark. I have ran DDU, re installed latest nvidia drivers, removed the ethernet cable and disabled wifi and ran ddu and then re installed latest nvidia drivers and this basic display driver adaptor with a yellow exclamation mark wont go away. Its a brand new build. Been trying to solve this issue all day, even re installed the os as this is a brand new nvme drive. I clicked on the Microsoft basic display driver adaptor and even tried to uninstall it, and that did not work either. This is the issue here
All 7000 series AMD Processor now have Integrated Graphics on it. Here is the latest AMD Driver for your new AMD APU Processor: -ryzen-processors/amd-ryzen-9-desktop-processors/amd-ryzen-9-7...
You can use Device Manager to install just the driver from the downloaded and created AMD Installation folder at C:\AMD by directing Device Manager to scan that folder for compatible AMD Driver for your IGPU.
Thank you so much, this was doing my head in for the past 2 days. Ur solution has worked. I use get INTEL cpu's my last intel cpu was the i7 9700k. I needed a upgrade, and after seeing how well AMD supported there AM4 platform and how good the cpus were on that platform I decided to jump to AM5. Everything is really snappy on this pc. I have one slight issue a few usb ports on the back of my motherboard have this issue where when I plug in my xbox controller dongle and i touch the cable or give it a slight wobble it disconnects and re connects. This happens mostly in the USB port named BIOS (In the manual it does say it works like a normal usb if u want to use it.) It also does it last port on the same row as the bios usb port. Other usb ports are fine I might have to RMA the board. Other then that thank u.
I had the same issue, can't remember what I did but eventually got the AMD driver installed. I have had another issue with it though where I can be in game and the PC crashes and when I investigate it is due the the AMdD igpu driver being disabled, I then enable it and get error 31 and have to uninstall the driver and then reinstall it.
I adjusted the resolution on a virtual machine with Windows server 2019 installed, but there was no 19201080 option, the maximum was 12801024 option, the virtual machine had no GPU graphics card, and only "Microsoft Basic Display Adapter" in the display adapter. Its driver version is "10.0.17763.1"
I'm installing a MicroServer Gen10 Plus for a client (Windows Sever 2019 Standard). When attaching a monitor via Display Port, I can't change the resolution. The only option is 1024 x 768. It looks "fuzzy" compared to my PC with 1920x1080.
Problem is stated as: " the Display Settings Resolution dropdown menu will be grayed out while running Remote Connect Software and unplugging a monitor cable." Yes, the resolution dropdown menu is grayed out, but I'm not running "Remote Connect Software"... I have a monitor plugged directly into the server.
Whenever possible, use the same display connection type. For example, if your PC or monitor only has a VGA output, connect it to the server VGA port. Use of any kind of adapter or converter cable or dongle might lead to decreased display quality or a lag over the connection.
I believe you have the cause listed in your original post. You are using the MS inbox driver for the video. I found a system in a lab environment with a base install of Win 2019 and it had the same issue that you are seeing using the inbox driver. I then installed the Matrox G200eH3 driver and I now have the option to change it up to 1600 x 1200. I would actually recommend the SPP be installed instead of just the individual component (to ensure you have updated drivers and firmware for everything), but if you are only interested in the graphics for now, then you can get this by downloading CP055529.exe from the HPE site:
The display adapter driver is showing as Microsoft Basic Display adapter. No surprise there. The issue is that the only mode it lists is for 1280x768. Is there any way to edit that to get better res, say 1920x1080?
I have a user that we recently upgraded to an Intel NUC 8 w/ the integrated Radeon Vega M graphics. The machine also has the on-chip Intel HD 630 graphics, but it's not hooked up to any of the various HDMI/DP ports on the machine, it's only used internally for some of the hw acceleration that it knows how to do.
The machine is being used in our print shop, doing large-ish (24"x36" @ 720dpi) jobs on a couple of wide carriage Epson printers. Printing is done directly from Photoshop CC 2018. The machine is running Win 10 Pro and is completely up to date at the time of this posting.
Yesterday, I moved the machine into its new home and discovered I still needed to install the right graphics driver in order to drive 3 monitors. All previous machine setup had occurred w/ a single monitor and the Radeon graphics card was driven w/ the Microsoft Basic Display Adapter driver. I downloaded the driver package from Intel and installed it and got all the connected displays up and running.
Today, I received complaints of Photoshop CC 2018 running extremely slowly when trying to print. Some research on Adobe forums revealed many users experiencing severe slowness when trying to print. The item that all reports have in common is that they're using AMD graphics cards and running the AMD driver with a version later than 17.10.1.
I was able to replicate the behavior that others had found. If I uninstall all the AMD Radeon driver/software and run on the MS Basic Display Adapter driver, Photoshop runs like a champ. However, the machine is back to one monitor.
The display adapter in my machine is too new to have support in any of the driver versions that other Photoshop users had found worked for them. I verified this by going on a scavenger hunt for the device IDs in Radeon driver packages from the end of 2017. Adobe forum users started posting about the Radeon/Photoshop interaction in April of 2018. Here's a decent thread if you're interested -
Ultimately this looks like a problem that AMD or Adobe need to fix. As soon as either or both of those companies release new versions that fix the glitch, I'll happily install them. In the meantime, my guy still needs to be able to do his job. In order to do that, I'm considering taking his 3x monitor setup away and giving him a single very large monitor.
What's the maximum resolution that the Microsoft Basic Display Adapter driver supports? I know it'll do 1920x1080 but I'm thinking of getting something much larger, like 3440x1440. Will the MS BDA support that resolution? I'm 100% aware that I won't get all the fancy GPU acceleration features and whatnot. I'm not happy about that but I'll live with it for a while if that's what has to happen. Can I shop for big monitors, or do I need to come up with another plan?
I am taking a 13th gen Dell PE730 and loading Server 2022 standard on it for lab testing. The problem is that Dell does not publish a display driver for the 13th gen server for Server 2022. The server is out of warranty so calling Dell is not an option, and they do not publish a driver for this service tag for Server 2022. I attempted to install the Microsoft Basic Display driver for server 2019, but that made no change. The underlying root is that I am unable to increase the display resolution so I do not have to scroll to see the entire desktop.
I have run into similar problems where I couldn't install the latest Windows Server on older hardware because of driver issues. One workaround is to install the latest version that IS supported and then try to install the newer one as VMs. I've had good success with that. Unless it is rather old, the version of the host OS is not nearly as important of the version used on the VMs.
Have you tried the standard process of looking up the Hardware ID for the display adapter in Device Manager and then searching for drivers based on that? That will often come up with a suitable driver.
In case anyone still has this problem. I use macbook pro 15 mid 2017. In the intel energie options just turn of all energy saving stuff. Important because i had the same problem. I had to do it for battery and non battery options to make it work. Don't know why.
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