If your IO drivers package is like mine, try running the install.bat file instead of asussetup .exe - from memory I think it's a silent install, so the drivers might only show as updated after a reboot. If not, you could also try running both files as admin. The other thing that might help is to go to Device Manager, look in system devices and try updating the drivers manually for the GPIO controller. Click on update drivers and then browse to the downloaded drivers folder. Not certain if this will help, but worth a try.

I have an application which needs to run in the background, so I'm using a WakeFullService for that. But in Asus Zenfone it's not working because Auto start manager does not allow the app to run. My expectation is:


Download Apk File Manager Asus


Download File 🔥 https://bytlly.com/2y4J0g 🔥



Have an ASUS Z170 motherboard with UEFI BIOS. I have a M.2 drive which has Windows 10, a 3 TB drive for data and a DVD drive. In the BIOS I am seeing "Windows Boot Manager" and for the M.2 drive another Windows Boot Manager, and the M.2 drive as another entry. Along with an entry for the DVD and 3TB drive. Total of 5 entries? What should the order of my boot menu be, confused with the multiple entries of boot manager (2 and 5), and for the 1TB Windows10 drive (2 and 4). This is what shows up in the Boot Menu options.

With all UEFI options disabled, I am stuck with a MOK manager post-install, which lists no files that I can import as key. I assume that must be the solution, since it seems to be the single thing I haven't been able to tryout, since there are no keys to import available through the MOK manager, and selcting "Continue boot" leaves an unbootable Ubuntu install, apparently.

Double-check that you've disabled Secure Boot in the firmware (not just by selecting the option the Ubuntu installer presents). If you have and you're still seeing the MokManager show up, then that implies that something is causing GRUB to fail to launch. You might try my rEFInd boot manager instead. Download the USB flash drive or CD-R version and try booting from it; you should be able to boot Ubuntu and then install the PPA or Debian package to your hard disk. Given the nature of your problems, I can't guarantee that this will work, but it might; and even if it doesn't, details of how it fails may be instructive.

I just got an asus dsl-ac68u modem/router and I noticed it has ssh access. I set this up and I can ssh in with root permissions, but it doesn't seem to have a package manager installed. Being used to Debian, just to test, I tried:

I don't recommend attempting to install Debian packages as the device is pretty limited (only 64MB of RAM). Get a package source that targets smaller devices, even if it means learning a new package manager.

There's no touchpad settings anywhere on my laptop, not in device manager or anywhere else and Asus Smart Gesture installation always fails. There's a 'disable touchpad' option (fn + f9), but it doesn't respond at all, so I assume that there's no touchpad so disable.

Thanks @jayeff, finally I fixed the problem by finding a more up to date driver for the touchpad than the one given by asus.com or tech support. It's ridiculous that the driver they offer is obsolete. They gave me v06 when v25 is out... e24fc04721

download limit exceeded. you can save the folder to yandex.disk and download it from there

mp3 song download hard bass

download ringtone of scary

grow your garden download

download apk gfx tool pro