The most popular usb controller chips are probably less than 5-10 different ones, so you could probably search for a usb controller card that uses the same chip, then go on that usb controller's card page and download that card's driver and use them.

1. like the first post says I tried uninstalling stock drivers windows installed...or I think I did that, but I think I actually made bad things worse, this is how device manager looked before and then how it looks now after, the USB 3.0 root kit and the Generic usb hoob (the third in row) isn't showing up anymore, I tried restarting and putting the card again, but didn't work. I didn't yet try to boot up the system without the pc, then shut it down and put the card in again and see if that works.


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I finally fixed it, it turned out that the part was simply damaged or something, I took it to one service guy and then he tried on multiple different OS's, driverpack, driverbooster and all that, every single driver we could find, we even contacted the distributor of that part and they gave us a driver that couldn't be found online and nothing worked, then the shop where I bought it asked to try it out themselves and they also couldn't do anything after a few days, so they put in another pcie card of the same type and...it instantly worked.

Same issue, Windows doesn't recognize the card, installing drivers doesn't help, etc. etc.


The kicker? The PCIe card works _FLAWLESLY_ under Linux. Lights right up and loads the USB thumb drive if inserted. Tried Windows both native and as a VM with PCIe passthrough (an M.2 SSD is recognized with no problems passed through).

The sound card is a M-Audio Delta Audiophile 2496, and I've tried installing the latest driver (32/64bit compatible) as well as older drivers going back to XP drivers using Compatibility Mode. The card still only shows up as "Multimedia Audio Controller" or sometimes as "Unknown Device" in Device Manager. Here are the device IDs:

Have not been able to get Windows to detect the driver using any method in Device Manager.

Tried going to the C:\Program Files\M-Audio\Delta\Streaming folder (created after installing the installer from the vendor) and right-clicking and installing the .inf file, but it wouldn't let me.

When I install the MAudioDelta_x64 driver manually in Device Manager, it says Windows isn't able to confirm hardware compatibility and that it doesn't recommend installing the driver, and when I install it anyway, it then says "This device could not be started (Code 10)". Same thing happens when I add the driver using "Add Legacy Hardware" in Device Manager.


Have tried different settings in the BIOS, re-seating the card in the PCI slot, installing the driver in Safe Mode, using Windows XP compatibility mode on the installer, but nothing lets me install the driver properly.

I'm not as much of a geek as the others here but I've had similar plobrems with drivers and this is what I found out - Windows doesn't always put the .INF file in the right place, so it can't access it to use it and that's basically what a driver is. A .INF file listing all the bits of firmware (I guess, I've looked at .INF files and they're just lists of stuff) that should be used with the object, be it a soundcard or whatever.

Yeah, somewhat curious as to why can't get the driver installed on this new machine when I never had problems with my old PC (maybe because I first installed XP on it and upgraded to 7?), but a new card would probably yield better quality anyway.

This driver also supports target mode for Fibre Channel cards.This support may be enabled by setting the desired role of the corevia the LSI Logic firmware utility that establishes what roles thecard can take on - no separate compilation is required. e24fc04721

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