![]() Processor: Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-4170 CPU 3.70GHz (4 CPUs), ~3.7GHzĭescription: Line In (High Definition Audio Device)ĭescription: Microphone (High Definition Audio Device)Īny ideas? BTW, I'm going to download the latest Windows 10 ISO, since the Windows Update was a pain, and will run the installer straight from Windows like I used to do back then.įantastic! I want to make sure a few things so that I don't make any more mistakes: I used WoeUSB-ng to create the bootable USB stick, from a Live Xubuntu USB, even though a tomshardware user told me to do it with Microsoft's own tools from another computer. I used an "old" (about 3-4 years old) ISO that I had in my disk, to install Windows. I will only see the "Intel Display Audio" and "High Definition Audio Device" entries. With or without installing the Realtek drivers, in "Device Manager" > "Sound, video and game controllers", I wouldn't have "Realtek High Definition Audio", which everybody seems to have, and I'm pretty sure I had it too. I tried some other things, like /scannnow, the audio troubleshooter, and installing every single update thru Windows Update, but with no result. ![]() (Should I install all that stuff on that page?) I also downloaded some from a mirror (Guru3D I think, because the download thru the official Realtek website is too slow) and also tried some Driver tools, but the two of them gave me BSODs and the first time I needed to let Windows restore itself to a previous point that's why I decided to re-install Windows from scratch a second time. I downloaded the Realtek Sound drivers from the ECS website, but didn't work. I tried to install Realtek drivers, because I guess that's what I had before the power outage mess, but didn't worked. Without that, the Playback tab is effectively empty. In the Sound window, something like this is what appeared, except that I don't have in there anything else other than that Intel Display Audio stuff: I could see by clicking the Volume icon on the taskbar and on the Sound window from the Control Panel, that Intel Display Audio appeared – that my monitor was selected as an audio device, which is weird to me, since it's just a monitor with no speakers nor anything as far as I'm concerned. On the second clean install, the Graphics and Display Audio drivers installed automatically, without me installing Intel's driver assistant. I installed Intel's driver assistant, and it got me the Graphics drivers, but also some Display Audio stuff. Then, with the OS already installed (and in fact I installed it cleanly two times) and doing absolutely nothing else by myself, the audio didn't work either. I guess this already may give indications to you. Although, in Xubuntu, I need to unplug the earbuds from the case and then plug them back, otherwise the audio wouldn't work on that either.įrom the Windows installer itself, and given the subtitles of what Cortana said, I guess I should have been able to hear her speak to me thru the process, but I wasn't. I've tried them on a tablet, and on a Live Xubuntu USB that I created to try and fix my computer. I use and I've always used cheap, wired cellphone earbuds like these. But today, I spent all day trying to get the audio working, without success. After all that trouble, I restored the BIOS to optimized settings date and time are correct the HDDs work. Hello! After some problems I had with power outages trashing my Windows (I guess), yesterday I've finally re-installed Windows 10 by removing everything from the disk, so It's a clean, fresh Windows installation.
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