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Malymole

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  1. I have downloaded the latest I2C drivers from the acer website for my specific laptop model, and I've already seen that page but there's no solution that works
  2. I've already done that, and restarted, but not work
  3. When I go into basic mouse mode in bios then the touchpad works, but if i switch it to advanced, it doesnt appear in device manager. This is because of the I2C drivers not working, as it specifies it in the bios
  4. He's right, but if you don't want to build your own then stick with this
  5. Hi, I have an Acer Aspire 7 A715-72G-556j laptop, and I don't really use the touchpad (I use a mouse). Recently, I noticed that my touchpad wasn't working, and I quickly checked on device manager which didn't list my touchpad, but only my mouse. After further investigation, I found that the "Intel(R) Management Engine Interface", "Intel(R) Serial IO I2C Host Controller - A368", "Intel(R) Serial IO I2C Host Controller - A369" and "Intel(R) Serial IO UART Host Controller - A328" drivers all had error code 10, but with different reasons such as "The I/O device is configured incorrectly" and "Insufficient system resources exist to complete the API". Then when looking through my BIOS, it said that when using the "advanced touchpad" option, make sure that the I2C Driver is installed otherwise you wont be able to use it. So I changed it to "basic" mode, and it worked perfectly, but with the downside of no windows gestures. Is there any way I can fix these other drivers so that I can use the "advanced" option? I've attached some screenshots of device manager. Thanks in advance for any replies Note: The "advanced" option was working when i first got this laptop
  6. That second one is much better. Also, just get a 144hz monitor, and not a 240hz cuz the difference is minimal. Definitely get 144hz over 60hz if your intended use is for gaming
  7. hi, srry for the late reply, but yes, basically all HDMI cables support 144hz. 144Hz at 1080p, 75Hz at 1440p, and 30Hz at 4K (this is if your cable is HDMI 1.4 as opposed to 2.0/2.1). Make sure, if your getting a gaming monitor, that it has hdmi 2.0/2.1 input
  8. HDMI isnt bad, it's just hard to find a monitor that supports 144hz streaming via HDMI. Most HDMI outputs support it, but many inputs don't. I'd recommend displayport if your use is for gaming, but if your monitor supports HDMI at 144hz (and your monitor is 144hz), then I'd stick with HDMI. If your monitor is 60hz, then definitely stick with the HDMI
  9. Yes I think so, open an elevated command prompt, and type "chkntfs /x c:". Press enter and it should stop
  10. Saying that means this whole conversation is for nothing. Everything that you and I have talked about is related to speed
  11. Thats why I said with a SATA ssd... Those speeds are clearly from nvme SSDs. Its about the speed-to-price ratio, not how fast can SSDs get
  12. Dude they have write speeds of up to 2GB/s and read speeds of 2.5GB/s. I dont think that any regular SSD is gonna get close to that, even theoretical speeds
  13. Yes, the whole game is obviously not gonna all fit in the cache, but that's basically saying whats the point of accelerating hard drives if its not gonna fit in
  14. Well obviously if the games are going to be in the cache, then they will load much faster
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