I've run into a major issue since the NVIDIA driver update 517.48 where I am getting frequent black screen crashes. Usually after playing a game for a little while and exiting out in the next 1 to 5 minutes my screen will go black and I will still get audio and the PC will respond to input but I have no visuals forcing me to hard restart. Occasionally I was being met with a failure to post and a white QLED error that would resolve after another attempt to reboot or two. I was getting BSOD 0x00000116 dxgkrnl.sys, LiveKernelEvent 1b0, 116, 117, 141, and a sprinkle of NVIDIA Container failures. I tried using DDU to uninstall the driver and roll back and that didn't fix it. I used DDU (from safemode always) again and reinstalled 517.48, I updated all my drivers for the chipset, lan, audio, etc. and was still getting the errors. I ran a DISM and SFC scan still got errors. Upgraded to windows 11 hoping to solve the issue and it did not. I tried changing the power profiles to max power and updated the vBIOS to enable resizable bar and it did not fix the problem. Now I am getting "Event ID 0 from source nvlddmkm cannot be found. Either the component that raises this event is not installed on your local computer or the installation is corrupted." right before crashes in the event viewer as well as LiveKernelEvent 141 & 1c5 errors. I feel like I am at a point where I am unable to resolve the issue on my own but I have a hunch this is actually a driver or software issue and was wondering if you fine folks on the Zotac subreddit had any other solutions I could try before I follow through with an RMA?

Latest graphics card drivers (for Microsoft Windows) are available for download from the ZOTAC website [Support - Download]. Run the driver file (exe) in the target Operating System, to update to the latest driver. Drivers may also be downloaded from NVIDIA directly.


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I bought a new Zotac RTX 3060 and installed it in my desktop PC. The card turns on and is listed as Basic Display Adapter in the device manager. When I try to install the NVDIA drivers however it does not work, because it does not find a compatible graphic card. Any idea how I can fix this?

Hello, under normal circumstances I was downloading from GeForce Experience, but it was running at high frequencies when idle. I downloaded and installed the 3060 driver from NVIDIA's own site and there was a decrease in FPS. In games, this is a serious decrease. In GTA 5, I get over 75 FPS in Ultra with MSAA on, now I get 60 FPS in Ultra settings with MSAA off, the driver I downloaded etc. Likewise, I deleted it with DDU and reinstalled it from GeForce Experience, but the problem was not solved, what can I do? Graphics card model; Zotac RTX 3060 12GB

Idling frequencies were high before, I read in a few places that it was fixed by updating the driver. As I said, I normally installed it via GeForce Experience, the same version was already installed, but I downloaded and installed the driver from NVIDIA's own site and then this happened. I was using GeForce Experience's 537.42 driver, but a problem occurred when I downloaded and installed it from NVIDIA's own site. I deleted the driver and downloaded and installed it again from GeForce Experience, but the problem was not resolved. Please help, I need help.

BSOD/Error list: APC Index Mismatch system thread exception not handled driver IRQ L not less or equal DPC watchdog violation Firestorm.exe ntdll.dll call issue Nvlddmkm can not be found Faulting Nvcontainer.exe

I bought a 3080 Trinity OC on Saturday and had been working fine since, but today I'm getting a bunch of display driver nvlddmkm stopped responding errors and other nvlddmkm errors that cause graphical glitches and the screen to flash. I haven't had time to game today but I assume I'm going to be crashing there too. Already tried uninstalling and reinstalling the latest drivers. Anyone else run into this and able to fix it or should I get started with the RMA process with Zotac?

I just bought a Zotac GEForce GT630 video card (model ZT-60416-20L). I went with Zotac because they're not shy about announcing their Linux support. You can download Linux drivers right from their website ( ). Downloaded the x64 driver.

I built my own computer, and the motherboard is a Zotac ITX GeForce 9300. The Wi-Fi adapter doesn't work and the CD it came with has no Linux drivers. I am using the latest stable release of Linux Mint 7.

Update 2: I installed the VT6656 Linux driver CesarB posted, but I can only access the network and not the Internet. In addition, every time I boot the system doesn't recognize the adapter. I can reinstall the driver with every boot, but it will still only connect to the network.

Your lspci output shows only one Ethernet controller (the wired one, a MCP79 which should be supported by the forcedeth driver). Doing a web search, I found a curious piece of information in a review of your motherboard: "The WiFi module [...] connects to the board via a USB header". If that is true, the information you want will be found not in lspci, but in lsusb.

It seems Linux Mint is based on Ubuntu 9.04, which uses a 2.6.28 kernel. You could try a more recent kernel (Ubuntu 9.10, which should be released late this month, uses 2.6.31) to see if there is a driver for your device.

EDIT: Now that you posted the lsusb output, I can see that 160a:3184 is your wireless card. A quick search shows it is a VIA wireless card, apparently called VT6656. It seems there is a driver from VIA for it, and it seems to have been added to the staging tree for cleanup and possible future inclusion in the Linux kernel. See also Ubuntu bug #162671.

I don't know Mint. Have you added that distribution's versions of the multiverse repository to /etc/apt/sources.list? If you do, the necessary drivers should be installed automatically. If not, download the appropriate driver directly from nVidia here:

it's just weird I had zero issues, although I did read the studio drivers are more stable and actually recommended by gigabyte so that's what I installed (not to mention I'm using an "underpowered" 500w PSU, but hey...)

I had sporadic black screens, but it didn't really bother me until it happened about a dozen times within a span of a few minutes back on January 8th. We can see from my Windows reliability monitor how it was happening every few days (red X's on the 2nd row) until 1/8 when it was so bad that I updated drivers and it stopped happening completely.

1) Looks like there are some modified Nvidia drivers which *may* work: (Some versions require KernelEx patched OS)

 I'd atleast try this - -bin/dl.cgi?file=nv2k19745.exe , doesnt appear to require KernelEx

The latest Intel Wireless and Bluetooth driver packages are at version 22.100.1, far newer than the versions you say you've have tried. I would give them a try and see if they alleviate your issue. Use this process to do a clean install of them:

There is no official supported RTL8111/8168/8411 driver for ESXi 7. The community-supported version (see here) has been maintained until ESXi 6.7. Scotts hint to boost your homelab is a good avise, and, there are some really cool USB 3 network native drivers for ESXi 7 on the VMware fling page here.

But, the Zotac box runs Ubuntu too, and you simply could run VMware Workstation. See the Linux driver page here, and choose the appropriate Linux driver for the Ubuntu Linux kernel. Not sure if UEFI Secure boot VM in Workstation works with the newest Realtek UEFI UNDI driver, but, why not give a try.

If you could not find the exact driver for your hardware device or you aren't sure which driver is right one, we have a program that will detect your hardware specifications and identify the correct driver for your needs. Please click here to download.

DriverGuide maintains an extensive archive of drivers available for free download. We employ a team from around the world which adds hundreds of new drivers to our site every day. How to Install Drivers Once you download your new driver, then you need to install it. To install a driver in Windows, you will need to use a built-in utility called Device Manager. It allows you to see all of the devices recognized by your system, and the drivers associated with them.

If you are having trouble finding the right driver, stop searching and fix driver problems faster with the Automatic Driver Update Utility. Many computer problems are caused by missing or outdated device drivers, especially in Windows 11. If your deskttop or laptop is running slow, or keeps crashing or hanging, there is a good chance that updating your drivers will fix the problem. Automatic updates could save you hours of time.

Recommendation: We highly recommend that most Windows users (unless you are advanced) download a driver update tool like DriverDoc [Download DriverDoc - Product by Solvusoft] to help update your Zotac Network Adapter drivers. DriverDoc automatically downloads and updates your Zotac driver, ensuring you are installing the correct version for your operating system. e24fc04721

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