I have an HP Pavilion 13 x360 and I have the same issues as you have. Currently, there is no official 'tablet mode' support nor is there even proper touch UI support in Ubuntu/Unity. Unity 8 is supposed to bring those features.

I did a clean windows 8.1 install on my HP stream x360, (not the HP WIN8.1 recovery mode) downloaded all drivers here from the HP website. Everything worked accept the touchscreen. In system i see "no pen or touch is available for this display". Pen and Touch is missing in control panel., also Tablet PC settings is missing. Is there any touchscreen driver available for the HP Stream x360 ?


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The key to the touchscreen is the "Intel Serial IO" driver. On a fresh install of Windows 8.1 HP Support will not pick this up as a necessary driver, you have to find it on the support site and it lives under "Display/Video Drivers".

In theory, you can upgrade to 10 because Windows 10 will "grandfather" in the 8.1 drivers. However, I've noticed on some machines this causes instability in the long run. Don't know about the stream though, I am waiting till Intel releases the "Serial IO" driver for Windows 10 to upgrade.

The HP Driver Packs contain the Microsoft Windows drivers in .INF-based installation format. This INF installation method can be used standalone or with bare-metal operating system deployment tools that require .INF-based drivers. Select 32-bit or 64-bit to see a list of platforms (notebooks and tablets, workstations, and desktops) and the respective driver packs under the operating system.

I recently purchased the HP ENVY 13-ay1000 x360 Convertible PC (3T487AV) around Nov 2021. I love everything about this laptop except for one major issue ... The fact that the wifi connection would only work reliably if I was sitting right next to my router. If I happened to move into the spare room of my apartment which is 5-or-so metres away from the router, then the wifi connection would suddenly deteriorate, display a weak signal and/or drop out altogether. This is not a problem that I faced with my other devices, including my older generation HP Envy 13.

As of Jan 2022, there is now an updated driver that can resolve this issue. That being said, you will not find it on the HP website. I downloaded the driver from the Lenovo website at the following link. In the README it states that the Driver adds:

Installing this driver on my HP ENVY x360 has resulted in a vast improvement to the wifi connection; without me having to go to the trouble and cost of replacing the wifi card. Hopefully this update will be implemented on the HP support website soon (the latest driver is current for 19 Oct 2021).

HP ProBook x360 11 G2 EE Notebook PC drivers will help to eliminate failures and correct errors in your device's operation. Download HP ProBook x360 11 G2 EE Notebook PC drivers for different OS Windows versions (32 and 64 bit). After you have downloaded the archive with HP ProBook x360 11 G2 EE Notebook PC driver, unpack the file in any folder and run it.

In 2017 Windows 10 installation instructions appeared at reddit (referenced at The Verge, superuser, Windows Central and How-To Geek) using the Lenovo driver n1mgx14w.zip. This solution didn't seem to be limited to HP laptops. In 2019 problems with the Synaptics driver update version 19.5.10.75 and how to avoid it were discussed at HP Community. Unfortunately all solutions stopped working after the Synaptics driver version 19.5.x was included in the Windows feature update version 2004 in May 2020 because it could not be rolled back through the Device Manager driver update as usual as reported at HP Community. Also a registry entry could not block the driver update.

However this new instructions at reddit explains how it is still possible getting the Lenovo precision drivers working with all later Windows 10 updates including Windows 11. I encountered a new problem and describe here, how it can be avoided. One option is using the newer precision driver n1mgx28w as described at HP Community. This also provides edge region filtering which previously was greyed out and possibly some other improvements. I also tried the even newer driver n1mgx39w, but it didn't work. The installation process is as follows:

Note: The touchpad needs to be installed as Synaptics SMBus ClickPad in Device Manager and no other HID device may show up. Otherwise start over again. The easiest way to accomplish this is running Setup.exe of the Synaptics driver 19.3.x. Alternatively you can use Update of device manager. Then you need to select Synaptics SMBus ClickPad after the Have Disk dialog. If it says device not recognized, role back the driver, restart and try again. Likewise if Setup.exe fails, restart and try again. It usually works the second time.

Its a good idea to run a Windows update now, to check if version 19.5.x of the Synaptics driver update gets accidentally installed. If this is the case immediately roll back the driver through Device Manager before a restart (otherwise its too late and you need to start all over again). Try to block the update again until it doesn't get installed. Then this update should not happen again until a bigger Windows update.

If you used n1mgx14w (v19.3.4.58) a remaining new problem was SynTPEnh.exe constantly restarting. What's worse, more SynTPEnh instances get started then killed and accumulate over time to a heavy load. Reinstalling the driver as suggested - even several times - did not help and a timeout wasn't the problem either. However, the problem disappeared after reverting an accidental 19.5.35.47 driver update of Windows 11. So it turned out, that the solution is replacing the Synaptics SynTPEnhService.exe in the driver directory with its 19.5.x version. To

I have an HP EliteBook x360 1030 G2 that has been constantly freezing up to the point where the cursor no longer moves and I have to do a hard shut down by holding the power button in. I've isolated the issue to the graphics driver for the Intel HD Graphics 620 integrated gpu it has in it.

The laptop works fine when I uninstall the driver and just use the Microsoft Basic Display Adapter and doesn't freeze up at all. Shortly after I install the graphics driver from HP (I've tried several from various years to see if it was a recent bug to no avail) or directly from Intel it starts freezing the moment it does anything that uses the gpu beyond idling. After this happens I have to do a hard shut down and uninstall the driver through Device Manager as quickly as possible in order to get a functioning machine back.

Any help would be appreciated as I don't really want to have to get rid of this machine as it's still great for a daily driver and I wouldn't feel comfortable selling it knowing there is this problem.

I install the graphics driver from HP (I've tried several from various years to see if it was a recent bug to no avail) or directly from Intel it starts freezing


I thought that initially as well. However I've exhausted basically every option that it might be. It does the same thing on fresh installs of Windows only after I install the Intel graphics driver. If I just leave it as the MS basic display adapter it doesn't freeze at all. The only thing I can think of with it persisting through numerous driver versions is that it's an old bug. If it was never fixed then it would persist through updated versions and no amount of switching drivers would fix it. I've also installed the latest drivers directly from Intel as well and still no dice.

I also know it's not an issue with it being on Windows 11, despite the CPU not being supported, as it has done the same thing on Windows 10 and Ubuntu, again it only does this after the graphics driver is installed. So being on Windows 11 is irrelevant.

I've googled around and it looks like it's a common issue that the Intel Graphics Driver causes freezing on the HP EliteBook x360 1030 G2 and has been resolved by switching versions of the driver, unfortunately they never specify which version they switch to. This is why I decided to make an account here and see what assistance I can get.

Having said that, this actually looks more like a hardware or operating system (OS) issue than a driver issue. Please keep in mind that an "old bug" like this one won't persist for so long time and through many driver versions unless it is an issue tied to a very specific system model/SKU that would require a special fixed from the Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM), which actually seems to be the case based on the links you shared.

It is worth mentioning that there is no one official Linux Graphics driver version. Most Linux-based* distributions already include Intel Graphics Drivers. These drivers are provided and maintained by the Linux* distribution vendors and not by Intel.

Because the issue also happens on Linux (which should be using the Linux graphics drivers) and on Windows 10/11, this is pointing out that this doesn't seem to be a driver issue and could be a hardware issue. Please keep in mind that the Microsoft Basic Display Adapter driver won't enable all the features supported by the GPU, thus, sometimes it may give the wrong "idea/feeling" that is working fine on this basic driver, and one might think "it shouldn't be a hardware issue", when the basic driver might be actually hiding the real problem because it is not enabling all the features.

In this scenario, the best thing to do is to contact HP* Support and report the issue directly to them so they may assist you with further support. For instance, they may provide you with a specific fix/driver/firmware/BIOS that may help with the problem, or they may help to confirm if the system is supported under Windows 11 and if they have a customized graphics driver for your system validated for Windows 11, and/or they may assist you with additional debugging or a physical inspection of the system in case it is required. 006ab0faaa

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