![]() ![]() Since I don't have anything connected to the motherboard graphics, I just disabled Intel graphics in Device Manager. Based on your suggestion, I looked in Windows Update History, and sure enough, Windows installed a driver update on the day everything broke: Side note: I really lost a lot of respect for NVIDIA - after paying premium $$$ for their hardware, their driver installer is pushing advertisements? Seriously? And they create 600+ Mbyte driver packages and then cap their server download speed at 16 mbps? Seriously? Never heard of Content Delivery Networks, I guess.Īnyway, the driver update did not make any difference. I installed NVIDIA 457.30 studio drivers. Those are the drivers that were installed with the RTX 2060 Super board when I bought it about a year ago. The motherboard is a Gigabyte GA-Z170X in a tower. I don't know about the "Mobile platform". Try the 2019 version and see if that helps. I've never seen that before.Īt any rate, if the NVIDIA driver update doesn't help, and you really do have an ATX motherboard, Gigabyte has some older Intel VGA drivers for it. The NFO says this is a Mobile platform, but the computer model number is for a Gigabyte ATX motherboard. Perhaps courtesy of a Windows update?īut.now I'm confused. I suspect that's related to the Intel iGPU graphics driver you have installed, which is new. However, that's probably not going to stop the crash. Dwaine Maggart wrote:You need to update the NVIDIA driver to the current 457.30 Studio version, from the NVIDIA Driver Downloads site. ![]()
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