The same story with Intel(R) UHD Graphics 620 (FUJITSU T938)
Reinstalling graphics driver did not solve the problem.
Different story, in your case it is probably the driver version.
Step 1 when you have work fetch trouble is to review the most recent work request log for the computer in question.
The same story with Intel(R) UHD Graphics 620 (FUJITSU T938)
Reinstalling graphics driver did not solve the problem.
Different story, in your case it is probably the driver version.
Step 1 when you have work fetch trouble is to review the most recent work request log for the computer in question.
Interesting, I had no idea that the max driver version was hard coded. Do most projects do that? I have had problems with several projects and downgrading the drivers worked to get the tasks flowing again.
Doing a clean install of the latest and greatest Nvidea driver seems to have it fixed. Why the old driver ceased working is puzzle to me. I did successfully trash my 1 day cache in very short order.
Doing a clean install of the latest and greatest Nvidea driver seems to have it fixed. Why the old driver ceased working is puzzle to me. I did successfully trash my 1 day cache in very short order.
Windows 10 is rolling out updates right now, it's common for them to think THEIR drivers are better than the ones we manually installed so they replace them during the update process.
Windows 10 might have ruined
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Windows 10 might have ruined Nvidia driver capabilities while performing an update. You could try reinstalling Nvidia driver. https://www.nvidia.com/Download/driverResults.aspx/145534/en-us
Reboot after installation.
Solved. Thank you.
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Solved. Thank you.
Richard
The same story with Intel(R)
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The same story with Intel(R) UHD Graphics 620 (FUJITSU T938)
Reinstalling graphics driver did not solve the problem.
Andrey Otroshenko wrote:The
)
Different story, in your case it is probably the driver version.
Step 1 when you have work fetch trouble is to review the most recent work request log for the computer in question.
The URL to do that looks like "https://einsteinathome.org/host/hostID/log", where one must use the Einstein-specific numeric hostID.
Reviewing that for the machine you probably have in mind, one sees these interesting lines:
archae86 wrote:Andrey
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Boinc stopped seeing my
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Boinc stopped seeing my Gigabyte GTX1060'
I have rebooted, device manager sees it, I uninstall it from device manager and rebooted. I have not idea what to do to get it back
what does the first 30 lines
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what does the first 30 lines in the event log say?
Doing a clean install of the
)
Doing a clean install of the latest and greatest Nvidea driver seems to have it fixed. Why the old driver ceased working is puzzle to me. I did successfully trash my 1 day cache in very short order.
Betreger wrote:Doing a clean
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Windows 10 is rolling out updates right now, it's common for them to think THEIR drivers are better than the ones we manually installed so they replace them during the update process.
This was a W8.1 machine and
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This was a W8.1 machine and the driver was not updated AFAIK, the same driver since the days of a a GTX660