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. 



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.


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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. 



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.

I have no sound card on my machine, but I want to (automatically) record screen with audio on it. So I thing it's some kind of virtual sound card driver needed to loop back sound send to play to microphone. Is there such solution for Windows OS?

Periodically updating audio drivers can help avoid performance issues and introduce new product features. New audio driver packages may fix bugs that cause sound issues, while helping to enhance your sound devices. Generally, updating all your PC drivers will ensure your computer and accessories are functioning at their best.

Ready to automatically update all your drivers with a single click? Then you should use a specially designed tool that makes driver updates super easy and convenient. After a quick scan of your entire PC, AVG Driver Updater will identify any outdated or malfunctioning drivers (sound drivers, graphics drivers, and any others), automatically find updates, and quickly install them for you.

Realtek is a very common audio solution for many OEM computer brands. Realtek is usually a simple platform for delivering quality sound/audio solutions to consumers. Below are some of the more common solutions to Realtek audio driver issues and installation options.

If after Windows Update, you have suddenly lost your sound (and in device manager, it has a exclamation point next to "Intel Display Audio"), and you are on Windows 11, save some time and go here to install the latest driver:

When the computer reboots, you still may not have sound. Just go back to device manager, uninstall the sound device, then update any other sound devices that have the yellow exclamation. Your sound will come back!

I have corrected the problem with the audio interface driver. I had uninstalled wavelab elements 11 then reinstalled it and selected to uninstall the generic low latency driver in the installation. That solved it, now Cubase 11 Pro now sees the correct Roland driver in the audio setup and no more missing ports. It seems like Wavelab was messing up the driver registry in windows 10 when it installed.

I opened one of the producer templates provided by Cubase to check it out and it seems to creates two S/PDIF ports for which I do not have any device connected. Impossible to get rid of these each time I open Cubase now you get the unmapped message and worse no more sound and impossible to set the interface back to build-in or my Clarett interface. It simply stays on unconnected. In the Studio Audio connections you see the build-in audio but if you try to connect it simply will not accept it.

I was having the same problem. I perchance found the solution. In windows, if you go via the start button to the programs, under Steinberg there is drop down for ASIO low latency driver. If you click it it opens up an option that allows you to click the Spider driver. And it works well thereafter. Bit silly way to do it. but there it is. It happens every time the driver changes or you download something. Cheers!

During the installation, I noticed my sound icon said that I'd lost my sound, but it came back again so I took no notice of it - until the first time I heard the awful tinny sound my computer now produces. Rather than using my speakers (3.5mm connection to the jack port behind my PC) with the onboard sound drivers, it seems the update has decided to use the woeful, despicable built-in speakers on my monitor, running AMD's drivers.

I've been to my sound control panel in an attempt to re-select my speakers, but lo they are nowhere to be seen. The realtek drivers in device manager also seem to have disappeared, replaced with AMD's, and leaving no sign of my speakers anywhere to be found. I have tried installing new devices in device manager, but they don't show. I've looked through my playback devices in sound settings (yes, even those hidden by 'disconnected' or 'disabled') and they still don't show. I've even been to my bios and checked for the onboard sound system, to check it's enabled. It is. Yet I still cannot connect to the speakers that until this update worked perfectly every single time.

While trawling my device manager I noticed a system device (high definition audio bus, I think) was highlighted as faulty. Don't ask me why. I searched for a driver update, it came through and now the sound panel recognises my speakers once more.

Mine had TWO instances, in conflict. I've uninstalled one of them, deleting driver when prompted. For the one that remained, updated the driver. After this step sound came back on and sound devices appeared once again in Sound, Video and Game Controllers. Hope this helps somebody! All the best!!!

I found another workaround on my system that appears to have solved the random USB sounds it was making: similar to the solution above except in device manager I uninstall the AMD devices and choose to "delete driver files for those devices" when it asks.

Update: The new adrenalin version 23.2.1 fixes the issue with sound (I "clean installed" it and kept my settings). However windows is still updating it's own driver over it after installation XD so you just have to "back" it in device manager (which is what I did) and it all works fine.

I tried the fixes other people have, such as rolling back the driver to an earlier version (according to Device Manager), but that didn't fix the problem. I tried de-installing the device, but it always came back with the same driver and the same problem of no sound. When I try Update Driver it says I have the latest version. They only fix I could find was to use System Restore to roll back to the restore point I had created before installing Catalyst.

Could this be done with Catalyst? I don't remember being given an opportunity to select what Catalyst installs. Alternatively, is there another way to update just the graphics / video software and leave the audio driver alone? Or, is there a way to manually get the AMD HDMI audio device to use the current Windows Driver? As far as I can tell from going through this discussion, the fixes that worked for others didn't work when I tried them, but I'm open to any suggestions.

One of the VMs rolled up just fine, but the other is throwing errors regarding the audio controller. The speaker icon in the system tray is marked with a red X. When clicked, Windows attempts to repair the error and fails. Device Manager does not show an entry for Sound, Video, and Game Controllers like the 'good' VM does, but rather an entry for Other Devices where the Multimedia Audio Controller is shown with a yellow triangle and the device status is listed as Code 28, "The drivers for this device are not installed".

I've rerun the VMWare tools update; first Repair, then Modify where I removed the device from both Device Manager and VMWare, rebooted, reinstalled, and the condition persists. I've tried manually installing the driver, but that fails with the message "The installation failed because a function driver was not specified for this device instance". References for this type of error harken back to Win XP and Vista days; I've tried what I've seen but nothing has worked so far.

After some investigation it appears VMWare is using an audio device that isn't supported by Windows 10, and it appears not even Vista. The hardware id is VEN_1274&DEV_1371&SUBSYS_13711274&REV_02 which is an old Creative Sound Blaster card from the Windows XP days. I searched for Windows Vista/10 drivers for it on the Internet and there weren't any legitimate drivers available. By the way, there are a lot of shady driver websites out there and they're all dangerous so don't download anything from them. 17dc91bb1f

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