Installing the driver (Note: The screen will goes black a few times during the process, which is normal).Wait for the system compatibility check.Right click on the file, click to start the driver installation.Right-click on the downloaded file and select to unzip the compressed folder.Click and Expand click on the arrow pointing down icon to download.The matching result for “GeForce RTX 2070 GAMING Z 8G” will show up, select to enter download section.For example: RTX 2070 GAMING Z 8G, input the product name on the top right search bar, press.Go to MSI official website, search your motherboard and download the driver.Input the chipset vendor like “NVIDIA” or “AMD” to search the driver to uninstall.Right-click on Windows Start icon > Select.Method 2: Uninstall the driver with Apps and Features Method 1: Uninstall the driver with Device Manager
Update drivers in Windows 10 Uninstall the existing driver Note: please uninstall the existing driver before performing a new driver installation process.ĭownload and update MSI official website’s driver versionĭownload and update the driver from chip vender Running a Windows Update could also fix the problem. Comparing with the chip vendor’s driver version, the vendor will release the newest version on their website, which can also be used as an option.
It is recommended to install the driver released on MSI official website, which has been running a full testing to make sure it is fully compatible to our product. This forum post contains more discussion on the topic.We recommend you to uninstall the current driver before installing the new driver. In any event, if all else fails and you are stuck using a Windows computer that is incompatible with Synthesia 10.3 or later, the previous release should continue to work: This is a rather unfortunate situation and a fairly good reason not to attempt using the latest operating system on a very old machine.
So, even though the hardware may support the OpenGL standard that Synthesia requires, Windows 10 doesn't know how to utilize it. you are stuck with the generic Microsoft driver. Because Intel doesn't provide updated drivers but Windows 10 requires an updated driver. This is troubling because Windows 10 requires new drivers made specifically for Windows 10. So, 10 year old systems haven't had any driver updates since the release of Windows 10. There is a special situation worth mentioning where upgrading to Windows 10 actually limits your graphics capabilities: Intel routinely stops supporting hardware after a certain number of years. Intel's driver page has a utility that can find the latest drivers for your system. This seems to be most common on systems with integrated Intel graphics. We've heard from users running the generic Microsoft graphics driver instead of the "real" driver for their hardware. If you receive an error about this while launching Synthesia, there is still a chance your hardware is actually compatible. We've described the reasons in more detail here, but the short answer is that despite our best efforts to maintain compatibility for as many users on older hardware for as long as possible, it becomes more challenging as that hardware grows beyond 10 years old. Starting with the 10.3 update, Synthesia now requires graphics hardware that is capable of OpenGL 2.0, which became a standard in 2004 (and was widely supported by 2007). Try to find an updated graphics driver for your computer. Synthesia About Songs Support Keyboards Support » OpenGL 2.0 Graphics Required