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After you upgrade your computer to Windows 10, if your Proview Display / Monitor Drivers are not working, you can fix the problem by updating the drivers. It is possible that your Display / Monitor driver is not compatible with the newer version of Windows.
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Find Proview Display / Monitor Device Drivers by Model Name or Number
How to Update Device Drivers
There are two ways to update drivers.
Option 1 (Recommended): Update drivers automatically - Novice computer users can update drivers using trusted software in just a few mouse clicks. Automatic driver updates are fast, efficient and elimate all the guesswork. Your old drivers can even be backed up and restored in case any problems occur.
OR
Option 2: Update drivers manually - Find the correct driver for your Display / Monitor and operating system, then install it by following the step by step instructions below. You’ll need some computer skills to use this method.
Option 1: Update drivers automatically
The Driver Update Utility for Proview devices is intelligent software which automatically recognizes your computer’s operating system and Display / Monitor model and finds the most up-to-date drivers for it. There is no risk of installing the wrong driver. The Driver Update Utility downloads and installs your drivers quickly and easily.
You can scan for driver updates automatically with the FREE version of the Driver Update Utility for Proview, and complete all necessary driver updates using the premium version.
Tech Tip: The Driver Update Utility for Proview will back up your current drivers for you. If you encounter any problems while updating your drivers, you can use this feature to restore your previous drivers and configuration settings.
- Download the Driver Update Utility for Proview.
- Double-click on the program to run it. It will then scan your computer and identify any problem drivers. You will see a results page similar to the one below:
- Click the Update Driver button next to your driver. The correct version will be downloaded and installed automatically. Or, you can click the Update Drivers button at the bottom to automatically download and install the correct version of all the drivers that are missing or out-of-date on your system.
Option 2: Update drivers manually
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To find the latest driver, including Windows 10 drivers, choose from our list of most popular Proview Display / Monitor downloads or search our driver archive for the driver that fits your specific Display / Monitor model and your PC’s operating system.
If you cannot find the right driver for your device, you can request the driver. We will find it for you. Or, try the automatic option instead.
Tech Tip: If you are having trouble finding the right driver update, use the Proview Display / Monitor Driver Update Utility. It is software which finds, downloads and istalls the correct driver for you - automatically.
After downloading your driver update, you will need to install it. Driver updates come in a variety of file formats with different file extensions. For example, you may have downloaded an EXE, INF, ZIP, or SYS file. Each file type has a slighty different installation procedure to follow. Visit our Driver Support Page to watch helpful step-by-step videos on how to install drivers based on their file extension.
How to Install Drivers
After you have found the right driver, follow these simple instructions to install it.
- Power off your device.
- Disconnect the device from your computer.
- Reconnect the device and power it on.
- Double click the driver download to extract it.
- If a language option is given, select your language.
- Follow the directions on the installation program screen.
- Reboot your computer.
Active6 years, 5 months ago
Background:
I have a custom built box that I like to setup with multi-boot using GRUB2 and having Windows 7 x64, latest Linux Mint x64, and couple other Linux/Unix distros.
I've had this setup working at several points but seem to have a reoccurring problem under Windows: at some point the Ethernet drivers always seem to crap out. I've tried this with both my integrated NIC (m/b is Gigabyte EP45-UD3R rev 1.1) and a separate NIC in my PCIe slot. BOTH NIC's work fine under either Ubuntu or Linux Mint (as, from what I understand, Linux uses a generic Ethernet driver). For the m/b integrated drivers, I have downloaded the latest and greatest from the Gigabyte site and tried these with a FRESH install of Win 7 x64. Still no luck.
I can probably get this working on my own in the short term by tinkering around in Device Manager or worst case, swapping in yet another NIC into another PCIe slot. But I'm more interested in the long-term.. this really irks me because as I've said, the hardware works fine under Linux and the issue is only on the Windows side. And since it has happened multiple times, I fully expect Windows will screw the pooch with the drivers in the future.
Due to certain hardware/software, I -- unfortunately -- can't just ditch Windows. If all else fails, I can always upgrade to a different m/b but in that case I would still like to run this rig elsewhere on my network.
My question:
Are there any generic Ethernet drivers out there for Windows 7 x64? Iwould love it if someone had ported the Linux drivers back to Windows,but if its generic please still mention it. I prefer open-sourced so that I can bereasonably sure that I'm not getting a virus, but I'd still be interested in hearing about non-free options provided that a) it is actually relevant for my scenario and b) it is not blatant spam-vertising.
I've looked on Google and SU but no luck thus far.
Diagnostic Info:
For the integrated NIC:Gigabyte link for my m/bhttp://www.gigabyte.us/products/product-page.aspx?pid=3013&dl=1#dl
I have installed the 'Realtek PCIe LAN Driver' (didn't work) and 'Realtek Ethernet Diagnostic Utility' (comes up with a blank screen under the 'General' section. Only other option was 'About'. Gave it ~10 mins hoping it would load something, but it remained quite useless).
In Device Manager, I tried installing the same driver manually from the INF. That didn't work either. I think Windows had been reporting device didn't start or whatever error code 10 was.
For the PCIe NIC:According to my newegg history, its actually a dlink (maybe thats a separate issue lol):http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833127163
Update:Ok, I'm up and working again in Windows 7. So really I had 3 issues:
Emc Utl Utlemc63 Drivers Login
1) My on-board NIC in the Gigabyte mobo doesn't work whatsoever (in Windows) even using the latest drivers. In Linux Mint, I was able to pull up sites just fine while my cable was plugged into this port.
Anyway, now that my internet works in both Windows and Linux, I've pretty much lost interest in this question but I will still post my Linux output below for completeness (who knows maybe it'll help somebody else).. See output below.
2) When my cable was plugged into the Dlink, it worked fine under Linux but nada under Windows (initially).
Turns out that I was being a moron and trying to install Realtek drivers for my PCIe NIC (having forgotten it was a Dlink until I checked newegg and later verified on the actual card). For this part, Alex P.'s answer set me straight (thanks!) and I have downloaded the latest* x64 driver for Dlink DGE-560T and that works great now.
*Technically, I got v1.10 because it was the newest version for 'Vista 64'. Win 7 x64 wasn't listed anywhere, and the only newer version I saw (v11.11.17) only listed 'Win7 32'
3) I was hoping to find a generic way of connecting to any working NIC hardware via Windows. I've used Linux on lots of boxes and never really had to do diddly for ethernet to work, it 'just did'.. guess I was hoping to port my experience lol.
Anyway, from Alex's answer and what I half-guessed before posting, it sounds like this probably doesn't exist -- or rather that's not the way things work. If somehow all that proves to be wrong or there's some clever little hack for it, please please add a comment and let us know. But for now I will assume that part to be done as well.
I will mention for the benefit of anyone looking for the same thing, that I remember some driver packs from my days of making automated Windows install discs (this was back with XP but I'm sure people have 'em for Win7 and later). Basically, the concept was you got these drivers packs and loaded them onto your customized install disc and then Windows would have a boatload more drivers to use (beyond what it already comes with). This isn't quite the same thing as I was asking about, and it wouldn't give you the latest and greatest but it may be a solution for somebody.
Linux Output:ok, so here is the output of
hwinfo --network
in Linux Mint 14 (off the live disc, since i just reformatted my system partition before my original post)I should also note that there was a 3rd card plugged into the old school PCI slot. No clue what card it is or if it evens works. I threw it back in an anti-static bag as soon as the Dlink was good to go.
With cable plugged into on-board (Realtek) NIC: Hello kuttichathan serial cast and crew.
With cable plugged into Dlink NIC:
zpangwin
zpangwinzpangwin
1 Answer
There is no such thing as 'generic' or 'universal' Ethernet driver. Your motherboard has Realtek 8111C Ethernet controller. Try installing the following driver
ftp://WebUser:[email protected]/cn/nic/Driver_Win7_7067_01222013.zip
Realtek chips have their share of problems and personally I would rather get a PCIe NIC based on Intel/Broadcom/Marvell chipset. But you should be able to get your Realtek NIC working as well. The most likely reason that linux drivers (even when provided by the same vendor) are more stable - they have less features implemented. I would start (after installing the latest version from the realtek website) with disabling all Power Management/Saving features in the driver.
The D-Link DGE-560T is using Marvell 88E8052 chipset. The version of the latest driver for it is 11.45.4.3.
Alex P.Alex P.