Gigabyte Xpress Install Windows 10

2/16/2018by admin

GA-78LMT-USB3 Motherboard Layout. * Due to a Windows 32-bit operating system limitation. Support for Xpress Install.

Gigabyte Xpress Install Windows 10

If you are using a Gigabyte motherboard and running win10 successfully or have run into issues, please post your basic hardware specs. What devices, drivers and from what source; Microsoft, OEM, 3rd party. If your Windows installation was an upgrade ( win7, win8 or win 8.1 ), insider activated or clean ( not upgrade ). What platform, 32 bit, 64 bit, AMD or Intel, amount of ram, drive type ( physical disks size and how many) Raid, scsi, ide, type of video card, number in system. The reason for this information is from my own experience with windows 10 that driver support for some devices have been left out for the os or made so that the system does not perform well to force obsolescence even though the hardware is more then able to run it.

Thanks to all that respond. Hi, The list you are requesting is a bit long, so just a few basic details.

This machine works quite well with Win 10 RTM 10240, whether from a upgrade of Win 7 SP1, Win 8.1 (have done both}, or a clean install of 10240. It hasn't always been that way with some of the Previews, but is stable and performs well at the moment. EP45_UD3R Motherboard x64 Core2 Quad Q9650 (OC'd) added recently, to replace Core2 Duo E8200 (OC'd) HD4850 Gigabyte Radeon HD4850 Graphics 8GB Gskill 1033 (2x4) 3 Seagate Data HDDs. 2TB, 3TB, and 4TB. No RAID 1 Corsair 120GB SSD for OS 1 HighPoint RocketU 1022A USB 3.0 Controller The machine for the most part is running drivers installed by Win 10 RTM, or that were retained through the upgrade. Some were original Gigabyte drivers, but a lot were using the hardware manufacturers drivers. You request seems like a thinly veiled rant against Gigabyte.

Also your basic premise seems to be flawed (that because the hardware can support Windows 10, that if Gigabyte doesn't make work, Gigabyte is cheating you, no matter how old the motherboard is.) Microsoft can state that XXX is the minimum requirements to run Windows 10. But it is the minimum, not a guarantee that Windows 10 will work on that machine, or if it will run into problems or not. Adobe Cs5 Master Collection Crack Mac Torrent here. In a nutshell the hardware is only part of the picture, and the BIOS, and drivers and such are the rest.

If I have a 15 year old motherboard it might have all the specs needed to run Windows 10. But something that old you are not going to get new drivers. It just not economical for any manufacture to update drivers for something that old. Now it is very possible that the old drivers might work just fine in Windows 10. Good you are lucky (and in fact most will be lucky).

So we come to 'force obsolescence', to you that seems to mean that if it is possible, Gigabyte should make it work for you. Well from a manufacture's point of view you paid for product/service for a certain period of time that they have calculated into price you paid for your motherboard vs how much it costs to make and support such.

I have actually no idea of how many years that Gigabyte will update drivers for their motherboard, but I do know it is not infinite. And most likely if they are going to test and fix drivers, they will start with their newest motherboards and as time goes on work backwards test/fixing older ones. I notice that you request the spec's from other people's machines, but didn't do the same for yours. Download Driver Audio Packard Bell Easynote on this page. And in the way you stated the question you neither want people to try to help you with your problem, or to use the information to buy a configuration that works.

For what its worth the machine I'm typing does have a Gigabyte motherboard in it, that frankly I really like. In fact I like it better than a similar Asus motherboard I have in another machines. Both machines upgraded with no real problems. I think there was a license problem on one of the AMD tools I don't use, and later I even found an update for it.

I did do clean installs of both of them, but that was mostly because of the fact on one of them I had the classic upgrade problem. As in there a ton of settings that have to be transferred perfectly from one operating system to another, and doing so is extremely hard to do without any problems. Microsoft has got a lot better at it, but still problems can creep in, and they did on one machine.

And I decided a clean install was the better approach then try to weed out these settings/install kind of problems one at a time. I have also run both 32-bit and 64-bit Windows 10 on this machine. Note I'm just another user trying to help.