This apparently seems to be a big issue with Windows 7, 8 and 8.1 also.:(.
One note - I am using the latest drivers released in June as well - but I had them on there before I turned off Optimus in the BIOS and switched to discrete graphics.' I tried this solution but Windows 10 will not boot correctly when I turn off Optimus and turn on discrete graphics. I don't need to do the song-and-dance that is presented in this thread using the nvidia control panel and manually disabling adapters and then joining them in a single display. I can now use Windows-P, select Duplicate and see my screen and the projector at the same time (and that meets my expectation). One of the other posters said they failed miserably with this setting, but once I did this, it worked like a charm. So any more ideas? 'I went to my BIOS and disabled the Optimus feature and switched to discrete graphics. Also it was a different VGA cable and different monitor. It sees the display but will not let me do anything with it. This is what happens when I don't use the Windows Key + 'P'. Extend works in that it allows me to see the other monitor and change the settings but I should be able to mess with display settings within Windows 10 itself. So If I click windows key + 'P' I get the option to Extend or Duplicate.
Serial To Usb Adapter Driver Windows 10 here. So I talked to one of the other guys here in my office and he told me the 'temp fix' that is really not solution. Are you able to test with an alternative VGA cable?It not an issue with the VGA cable. Joe (Lenovo) wrote: Yes, the version from the support site is the older 10., although this version is implemented and tested by Lenovo for the W520. Neither one is giving me an option to add the display and when I click Detect from Windows 10 display manager, it doesn't detect it but Nvidia Panel sees it but won't connect to it either. So maybe you can give me a direct link to the file you are referring too? Because I was using the latest version directly from Nvida's website and it was version 10.
Thanks Joe So I followed the link, clicked on OS - Windows 10 (64 bit) and did a clean install with the installer from the website and the version of drivers I ended up with was 10.
Select display and video graphics for Windows 10 to see the available driver downloads for your machine.
Joe (Lenovo) wrote: Hi, please install the most recent Nvidia driver from the Lenovo support site, which is 9. So I had it search the C: drive for a driver, it found it and installed the Intel(R) Active Management Technology - SOL. So you were right but I am so confused why it didn't install when I ran the install file. Many moons ago I did a bunch of clean XP installs and that device was always missing a driver. PCI database says Intel(R) Active Management Technology - SOL I think is going to be your best bet. Michael Quaintance wrote: I think you're going to be looking for chipset drivers. If your driver isn't working, use the driver having the same OEM with the your laptop/desktop brand name. Ati Radeon Hd 3870 X2 Drivers Windows 10. If you are looking for an update, pickup the latest one. Solved: I just upgraded Windows 7 Pro to Windows 10 Pro, and now I don't have a driver for the PCI Serial Port - 5575647. 6 Series/C200 Series Chipset Family PCI Express Root Port 2 - 1C12: Driver. Download the latest drivers for your Lenovo ThinkPad X220. Windows 8 (64) driver for PCI Serial Port for Lenovo. With the different devices, they can have the same driver, it's because they all use the same chip manufacturer.
Why do i see many drivers? Below is a list of drivers that may be suitable for your device.