Forum Discussion
5 Replies
- Anonymous11 years ago
Yeah that's where I get it from. I always tried updating it through Geforce Experience and I get the same error
- Anonymous11 years ago
Then something has caused your graphics chip to report an invalid ID when the installer queries it, OR the software was improperly coded to detect that model's hardware ID. Have you tried a slightly older version of the driver that still falls within the required range?
- Anonymous11 years ago
do a clean install of driver 3.47.
i would recommend just uninstalling NVidia's software using Window's built-in uninstaller. then doing a clean with CCleaner or something similar. then reboot and reinstall 3.47.
used to get these type of problems years ago with early 2000s drivers but nothing like it since. used to have to do dll or registry edits to change the reported driver version.
if you don't specifically use GeForce Experience to setup your games I would totally uninstall and leave it in the trash.
- Anonymous11 years ago
Okay i'll be sure to give it a try and get back to you.
- Anonymous11 years ago
@GObonzo wrote:do a clean install of driver 3.47.
i would recommend just uninstalling NVidia's software using Window's built-in uninstaller. then doing a clean with CCleaner or something similar. then reboot and reinstall 3.47.
used to get these type of problems years ago with early 2000s drivers but nothing like it since. used to have to do dll or registry edits to change the reported driver version.
if you don't specifically use GeForce Experience to setup your games I would totally uninstall and leave it in the trash.
The issue i'm having is not during it's setup step but before it even begins. When I open the file it starts the system check and gives me the error there.