A driver for what, exactly? I refurbish systems all the time, including older AMD systems, and Windows 10 does not require any chipset drivers for the older AMD chipsets. And there is no driver for the CPU itself - Windows 10 correctly supports older architecture AMD multi-core CPUs out of the box.

I pick from Gateway (the manufacturer of my pc) the driver of my motherboard it was for windows 7 My pc is now with windows 10 I am wondering if I flash my BIOS with the driver for windows 7 does it i will work ?


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That is a storage driver, and you should not need it. BIOS is an entirely different thing, whilst it should not be * required * either, it is often helpful to have the latest BIOS release installed to your motherboard when you are moving to the latest Windows release. You get BIOS files from mainboard or system manufacturers (i.e. If you built the computer and got a mainboard from Asus, you'd get updated BIOS for that board from Asus. If you bought the computer from Dell or HP, you'd get a BIOS update from Dell or HP.)

If your computer will work with Windows 10, then the drivers your computer will need will like already be in the driver repository files that come with Windows 10. You will not need to download additional drivers to support your CPU or Motherboard. Either Windows 10 will support it or not. If you meet the minimums specs for Windows 10 it should.

No need to be "snippy" ... "missing driver" is the reason\ device manager gives for the co-processor not being in operation. It also suggests you "update driver". Co-processors seem to be one of those areas where the information on them is quite murky, and they seem be left orphaned by AMD, Intel and Microsoft.

You have a very old computer most of the drivers are from 2009 - 2011. It is possible you computer isn't fully compatible with Windows 10. All the drivers for your Acer Computer is for Windows 7 none for Windows 10 which indicates it may not be fully compatible with Windows 10. Product support

Hi ... I have tried disabling and even uninstalling the Co-processor ... it gets reinstalled when I reboot the system. It doesn't seem to be having any definite negative affect on the PC, however it would be good to be able to eliminate that exclamation point!

Do you think updating the Wireless LAN Driver might have some affect on the Co-processor situation? Having the wireless adaptor disabled otherwise works fine for me as I am not using it in any case at this point. I will try out the SPECCY program you mention. Thanks.

The phenom II is still a good processor for all but the latest gaming. I have 4 of them in use one on an AM2, two on AM3 and another on AM3+. My AM2 is an older system than yours and works fine in Windows 10. All work great with Windows 10, in fact all are now on 1903 too. So hopefully one finicky component can be worked around. Once you disable the component in device manager it should not cause conflicts anymore.

I have an issue with my laptop. I need to sort out this issue as every time I start my laptop, this message is appearing and the graphic card driver showing a warning mark. The error message is telling about the driver but I really have no idea what is this fault.

The basic problem is that this PC model came with Win7 preloaded and you forced Win10 onto it. HP only supplies Win7 drivers for this model and since it has Switchable Graphics, only HP drivers will work on it.

There are others on this forum that have access to drivers I do not have,so if one of them points you to drivers that will work for your model and Win10, you will be OK; otherwise, you would have to go back to Win7 to get the drivers working.

I just updated my nvidia driver to 331.49. This is built with the 3.13 kernel. After starting X, the only available resolution is 640x480 on my 27" display. After uinstalling, the nouveau driver will run at 2560x1440.

>

> I just updated my nvidia driver to 331.49. This is built with the 3.13

> kernel. After starting X, the only available resolution is 640x480 on

> my 27" display. After uinstalling, the nouveau driver will run at

> 2560x1440.

>

> Has anyone else tried the 331.49 driver with success?

>

>

The nForce 3 chipset is not officially supported under Windows 7. The nForce3 chipset was never designed to support dual core processors. This leads to installation issues of AGP graphics cards with Windows Vista and Windows 7 if a dual core processor is used. The same problem occurs under Windows XP however the Windows XP operating system has a fall back that allows the AGP graphics card to essentially work in PCI mode which Windows Vista and Windows 7 do not have.

We are sorry for the inconvenience. The nForce3 chipset does not fully work with AMD Athlon 64 dual core processors. Under Windows XP display driver model, the display drivers were capable to downgrade to PCI mode to avoid this issue however under Windows Vista display driver model, this is not possible and that is why you get this error message. Our engineers have looked for a possible workaround for a very long time and unfortunately there was no workaround possible for this issue.

I haven't tested Windows 7 compatibility yet, but there are several lies in there.

First of all, I can confirm the board will definitely work in AGP 8X mode with Windows XP SP3 32-bit with a dual core CPU. However, you have to install a "special" nVidia All-In-One driver from Asrock's site. It's basically the latest nForce 3 driver (5.11) with a slightly older GART driver version.

Secondly, I can also confirm ATI GPUs work normally under Ubuntu 18.04.1 LTS 64-bit (using the agpgart-amd64 driver). This means the chipset can indeed work with multi-core CPUs and AGP 8X using a 64-bit OS. I can't believe nVidia couldn't release a working driver, yet open source engineers were able to do it without access to full documentation. See it with your own eyes (running with the HD 3450):

That's it for now. I will probably be trying out Windows 7 SP1 in the future just to confirm the GART driver issue. If that fails, I'll try Windows 8.1, and finally Windows 10 version 1511 (last one with AGP support).

To sum up:

- you can run the board with any CPU and any GPU without any problems on Windows XP 32-bit until the end of time

- you can run newer versions of Windows with a PCI graphics card (obviously too slow for any kind of gaming)

- it's supposedly possible to run Nvidia AGP cards in PCI mode on newer operating systems, but I didn't test this (once again, too slow)

- you will NOT be able to install drivers for any ATI card on operating systems newer than XP if you're using a multi-core CPU

- if you have a single core CPU, everything should work perfectly on any OS (but it defeats the purpose); I didn't test this because I didn't find an option to disable a core in BIOS

- if you want a modern 64-bit OS, you will have to use a Linux distribution; everything works out of the box, but you are limited to the open source Radeon driver which is slower than Catalyst

Sorry to resurrect this topic.

Have you ever managed to install a Catalyst driver for Ubuntu?

I have an HD4670 agp around and want to give this Asrock board another go with Ubuntu (zero experience on Linux distros for me).

Catalyst? Possibly you could find one that works, but HD4xxx Radeons are supported by the ATI/radeon opensource driver. Under Ubuntu 'it just works'. I don't have an HD4670 myself, but I do have the AM2NF3 with another ATI/radeon driver card (Radeon 9000) running Lubuntu, and didn't have to install any additional drivers to get it running.

Hi, I bought a new AM2NF3-VSTA a week ago. I updated the BIOS from version P2.10 to P3.30 using an Athlon 64 X2 2.4 GHz and 8GB DDR2 800. I installed Windows 7 Professional 64 bits successfully and works properly. Next I fitted a Phenom II X4 970 3.5GHz. I didn't use any additional driver, I downloaded the default BIOS settings and fitted the recommended ASUS Geforce 7600GS 256MB AGP.

Hi, I bought a new AM2NR3-VSTA a week ago. I updated the BIOS from version P2.10 to P3.30 using an Athlon 64 X2 2.4 GHz and 8GB DDR2 800. I installed Windows 7 Professional 64 bits successfully and works properly. Next I fitted a Phenom II X4 970 3.5GHz. I didn't use any additional driver, I downloaded the default BIOS settings and fitted the recommended ASUS Geforce 7600GS 256MB AGP.

Then, try installing the official NVIDIA GeForce drivers, and see if you don't get a BSOD.

Since Windows Vista, the basic Windows display driver for any NVIDIA GeForce AGP card on this motherboard, and with a dual core CPU, will "operate" - as in, you can use the Windows GUI. But, that's as far as you'll get without swapping out the GART driver. ff782bc1db

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