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
Starting in Windows 8, The Microsoft Basic Display Driver (MSBDD) is the in-box display driver that replaced the XDDM VGA Save and VGA PnP drivers. MSBDD is the default in-box display driver that is loaded during setup, in safe mode, in the absence of an IHV graphics driver, or when the inbox installed graphics IHV driver is not working or is disabled. The primary purpose of this driver is to enable Windows to write to the display controller's linear frame buffer.
By backporting the generic display driver from Windows 8 build 7963 (a beta which has both x86 and x64 builds), in which it can support both UEFI GOP and Legacy VGA BIOS, the benefits of the generic driver can work in Windows 7 and UEFI class 3 systems that can't support UefiSeven can receive display output.
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 The server is out of warranty so calling Dell is not an option, and they do not publish a driver for this service tag for Server 2022.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.
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.
I have the latest version of unRAID. I've installed a Windows 10 virtual machine. When I connect to the virtual machine with the Windows RDP, the screen resolution of the virtual machine adjusts itself to the size of the window in which I run it - all the way up to 3840 x 2160. However, when I use NoMachine to connect, I can only connect with an 800 x 600 resolution. In its control panel, the virtual machine shows a display resolution of 800 x 600 and no other. Apparently the VirtIO display driver has decided that this is the proper resolution and won't allow any other.
You need to install the graphics driver for the display adapter. Open device manager, look for the display adapter (should say Microsoft Basic Display Adapter). Right click it and select update driver. Point it to the qxl folder on your Virtio ISO disk and let 'er rip!
Sent from my SM-G930P using Tapatalk
You need to install the graphics driver for the display adapter. Open device manager, look for the display adapter (should say Microsoft Basic Display Adapter). Right click it and select update driver. Point it to the qxl folder on your Virtio ISO disk and let 'er rip!
Sent from my SM-G930P using Tapatalk
Now it works fine! I think the drivers are incompatible with windows 8. I had to do the same thing with Windows 8.1 on my desktop for my wifi adapter. Instead of working with the company's driver, I had to use microsoft's basic driver.
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.
Device drivers are files that enable Windows to communicate with devices such as video display adapters, SCSI and IDE controller cards, and mainboard BIOS and chipsets. Contact the computer or device manufacturer for the latest device drivers.
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