Gullible Jones wrote:Hmm. How does the driver issue manifest? Does a program that needs the graphics drivers crash on opening, or something?
Can you access the Windows error logs? That might help narrow things down...
Yes. It has "switchable graphics" so I have to make sure the Nvidia high powered graphics are "turned on" for the given application that I need.
I'll have to check the error log. The problem seems to be with the native graphics.
I also get this message automatically upon start up, from the system tray
"Device driver was not successfully installed
Intel® hd graphics 4000"
When I go to the device manager, in the general tab, I get "Reinstall the drivers for this device (Code 18)."
I tried to reinstall from the button in the device properties box but it thinks the driver is up to date.
I tried to reinstall direct from the intel site. The code 18 error went away, but now it seems to think the driver is damaged or not correctly signed.
I think I've done about all I can. I'm waiting to hear back from IT. It's also given me the blue screen of death a couple times.
I am very fortunate that this is one of 3 identical computers we have. One runs the dome. This one I use for development. The other has been on loan elsewhere. I got it back and I am now in the process transferring everything to it. It's just such a pain I have to take a half of day to troubleshoot. This isn't in my job description.
Oh wait, it is. Historically I've had to do this so often that when I got a chance to update the position description, I added hardware/technology troubleshooting to it at about 5% time. I probably spend more than that, though.
Too bad ignorance isn't painful.
"Standing at the forefront of human ignorance." Daniel and Jorge Explain the Universe