Hardware problems can be caused by outdated or malfunctioning drivers. Make sure your audio driver is up to date and update it if needed. If that doesn't work, try uninstalling the audio driver (it will reinstall automatically). If that doesn't work, try using the generic audio driver that comes with Windows. If you're having audio issues after installing updates, try rolling back your audio driver.

Select and hold (or right-click) the listing for your sound card or audio device, select Uninstall device, select the Attempt to remove the driver for this device check box, and then select Uninstall. 




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Select and hold (or right-click) the listing for your sound card or audio device, then select Update driver > Browse my computer for drivers > Let me pick from a list of available drivers on my computer.

When Microsoft installs updates on your system, we create a system restore point in case problems arise. Try restoring from that point and see if that fixes your sound problems. For more info, see "Restore from a system restore point" in Recovery options in Windows.

Select the Advanced tab and uncheck either the Enable audio enhancements or the Enable sound effects check box (depending on which option you see), select Apply, and try to play your audio device.

If that doesn't work, on the Playback tab, select and hold (or right-click) another default device (if you have one), and select Properties. Uncheck either the Enable audio enhancements or the Enable sound effects check box (depending on which option you see), select Apply, and try to play audio again. Do this for each default device. 



Look for IDT High Definition Audio CODEC. If it's listed, select and hold (or right-click) it and select Update driver, then select Browse my computer for drivers > Let me pick from a list of available drivers on my computer.

Select and hold (or right-click) the listing for your sound card or audio device, such as headphones or speakers, select Update driver, then select Search automatically for updated driver software. Follow the instructions to complete the update.





Select and hold (or right-click) the listing for your sound card or audio device, then select Update driver > Browse my computer for drivers > Let me pick from a list of device drivers on my computer.

On the Enhancements tab, select either the Disable all enhancements or the Disable all sound effects check box (depending on which option you see), select OK, and try to play your audio device.

If that doesn't work, on the Playback tab, select and hold (or right-click) another default device (if you have one), then select Properties. On the Enhancements tab select either the Disable all enhancements or the Disable all sound effects check box (depending on which option you see), select OK, and try to play audio again. Do this for each default device.



Look for IDT High Definition Audio CODEC. If it's listed, select and hold (or right-click) it and select Update driver, then select Browse my computer for drivers > Let me pick from a list of device drivers on my computer.

HP ENVY x360 Convertible 15-ds1xxx speakers and mics worked great. Upgraded to Windows 11 and worked for a while, but no sound or mic. Bluetooth sound works OK. YouTube and Zoom will fail since they cannot find sound drivers. I go to settings, audio and it cannot find devices, but when I go to device manager they are there. Went to devices and reinstalled and worked for a day, but new updates killed it again.

2. If the above driver doesn't work, but you can do whatever you did to get the sound to work right on W11, run the Hide Windows update utility that I zipped up and attached below, and hopefully it will find the pending updates messing up the audio, and you can check the box(es) to prevent the unwanted updates from showing up and installing.

Since HP has not posted any W11 drivers to your notebook's support page yet, the only suggestion I can offer for the microphone driver is to use the AMD automated detect tool from the link below, have it reset your graphics adapter and then it will install the latest W11 drivers for it. If you want to let it install the chipset drivers too, that would be fine.

Obviously there's some sort of conflict in a Windows 10 update that doesn't allow the correct sound drivers for the proudly stamped "BANG & OLUFSEN" hardware to function correctly. Most responses from HP on here suggest downloading the drivers from -en/drivers/laptops but none of them work. I've literally tried them all, with different compatibility settings and all sorts. I've been trying since I bought this laptop for 2,000 back in April and they all say they are not supported with the operating system. When speaking to support on the phone they said HP have been having problems with audio drivers for a long time now and there's nothing they can do.

It seems like an installer wizard should probably appear after the files are extracted to the hard drive but I just get the cmd prompt. With some other previous versions of the drivers a cmd prompt appears with "access denied".

@SalmanAhmed I used hp elitebook 840 g3. I downloded windows 11 with iso file. when i disable vtx(virtulazition technology) then my audio sound are not run. I try to solve this problem in various way. I i also mentioned that i am not a computer expert. here are some picture i attested which help you detected problem.

Hello, I have a 2012 MacBook Pro with windows 10 through Boot Camp, the problem is that there's absolutely no sound drivers or anything of any sort, I've tried the Boot Camp USB helper from Apple, I've tried reinstalling the OS, I've tried almost everything but I can't get it working, what could be going on?

After running the Update Drivers tool, I lost all audio on my Windows 10 laptop. Microsoft had me reinstall Windows 10 to no avail. And, Microsoft told me to contact the laptop manufacturer. After spending hours on the phone and in online chat sessions, Dell said they will have to send a tech out to my home to physically remove and replace the audio components. I had no other problems until running the update drivers program from Norton.

Another case of Driver Updater creating havoc with computers - too late but it should be avoided at all costs. In the system tray does the speaker icon icon appear, if not the necessary driver is not loading, although reinstalling Windows should have solved issue by wiping out changes made by Driver Updater. If it is available, is it showing sound being OFF, icon followed wit s X, if this is the case, will pressing the sound button on keyboard turn sound back on? Also, has the control panel 'Sound' been set up to to default computer sound, or in my case, headphones/speaker (have external speakers), in this case, they need plugging into computer port, plugging in I believe auto detects that they are plugged in & that will show in the control panel accordingly.

May help. Also try opening Device Manager, first item is for Audio drivers. Click >to open, double click driver description to open settings, click on 'Driver' in top bar, click on 'Update Driver' to see if Microsoft offers an updated driver, if so, install & see if that works, can always 'Roll Back'

Have you done multiple system restarts after the Windows reinstall? A restart should check for missing hardware drivers. Be sure you are using the Restart command. Not Shutdown and startup again if you have Windows Fast Startup feature enabled. If you use Windows 8/8.1, 10 or 11, there can be an issue with the Windows Fast Startup feature.. See more information here.

Gig1996.: I think Dell are telling you the wrong thing. If all was OK prior to Driver Update, this must surely be a software not hardware issue. Perhaps you should have a computer specialist look at it before getting Dell themselves involved. I, very, very occasionally have the problem with no sound, convinced it was a hardware issue with external speakers/connections. Then one day realised, when pressing sound button on keyboard, no pop-up appeared at bottom of screen as it should, that day it was accompanied by a Windows message pop-up to say driver not loaded, a reboot solved it. Have you tried pressing keyboard sound button to see if you get any sort of Windows notification?

After reinstalling Windows as a virtual fresh start, have you manually run Microsoft Windows Update a few times to see if this picks up any outdated drivers. A reinstall of Windows in theory provides a full suite of up-to-date operating system files, but not guaranteed to do so.

You must understand the fundamentals of how drivers work in Windows operating systems. Knowing the fundamentals will help you make appropriate design decisions and allow you to streamline your development process. See Concepts for all driver developers.

Audio drivers in the Windows operating system versions from Windows XP to Windows Vista conform to WDM and use the kernel streaming components. To understand the driver design decisions that you must make, see Kernel Streaming, WDM Audio Drivers Overview and Introduction to WDM Audio Drivers.

Microsoft Scripting Guy, Ed Wilson, is here. Hey, it is almost the weekend. In celebration of almost the weekend, I decided to get up early, fix a pot of Irish steel-cut oats, and a nice pot of English Breakfast tea. While the oats cooked, I used my Windows Surface to check my email. DB, this is when I ran across your email. Yes, Windows PowerShell can help in many different ways in looking at audio drivers. 0852c4b9a8

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