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I have a Dell D620 laptop and upgraded to Win 10 Pro from Win 7 Ultimate 64bit. The new OS will not detect the video card in my laptop which is a nvidia NVS Quadro 110M.The display adapter in device manager appears as Microsoft Basic Display adapter and monitor in device manager appears as a generic non-PnP monitor.The maximum resolution available at the moment in 1024x768.Everything was working fine under the previous OS but now that I upgraded it isn't working.Please help. My screens native resolution is supposed to be 1440x900.Thank you. The 353.62 driver from Nvidia refused to install.
In terms of overall gaming performance, the graphical capabilities of the Intel HD Graphics 4000 Mobile are significantly better than the Nvidia NVS 4200M.
![Resolution Resolution](/uploads/1/2/7/0/127093647/992375916.jpg)
Other thoughts?I have the same issue with a bunch of Dell Latitude D820 notebooks having the Quadro NVS120m. 'No compatible hardware.'
What's really infuriating is the display was working just fine until the 4th build before RTM. Then, all of a sudden, either you could get the resolution but Start was broken and title bars were non-existent; or you accept the crappy 4:3 1990s display.MICROSOFT: UNDO WHATEVER YOU DID AND WORK WITH NVIDIA AND/OR DELL TO GET THIS FIXED. There are countless older machines that will run W10 perfectly fine if you don't force them to break for no reason other than you want people to buy new hardware. Similar to savlisoz; I have a Dell D820 and upgraded to Win 10 Pro. The video card in my laptop is also a nvidia NVS Quadro 110M. Previously, the recommended resolution was 1680 X 1050.Again, the display adapter in device manager appears as Microsoft Basic Display adapter and monitor in device manager appears as a generic non-PnP monitor.After trying several sites, I found this site -and using the download link (mine was the 64bit link) and following the instructions, I succesfully installed the driver.
It now shows as a GeForce 7300, but provides a range of resolutions including my original setting, which provides the correct ratio of1.6:1 - the same as 1440 X 900. I have the same laptop Dell D620 running win10.best way to find driver is by their hardware IDs. If you look into device manager/display adapter/properties/detail/hardwareID you can see, that our NVS 110S have hwID:PCIVEN10DE&DEV01D7&SUBSYS01C21028&REVA1than you can go to site like laptopvideo2go.com and find driver by hwID. Newest one is 179.68.you need to run this driver in compatibility mode for Vista64 (or whatever driver you downloaded). How to turn off auto cc in outlook. You can find more here: driver is more stable than those for nvidia7300, specially while playing video with no artefacts.
Thanks to PumaPerez, it works now!If you follow the link for 179.68 you will find the setup files as.zip. The link to the information files on the website site is dead, but not needed.I 1st started the pdsetup.exe file followed by the setup.exe file. Both could complete successfully. However no change to the display settings.I logged in again as admin and opened the device manager. Manually updated the drivers from the downloaded and unzipped folder. Hurray, the screen started to setup for the correct resolution.Video card name changed toNVS 110M.
And now I have my NVIDIA setting on the right mouse button as in WIN7.All set. ( Sat 02 Jan 2016 )Ok Great!
This worked for me also on a Dell latitude D620 with Windows 10 Pro 32-bit.I had almost given up trying various downloaded drivers from both Dell website and Nvidia website (and OMG! It takes HOURS to download the drivers from Nvidia web site!!???) so, it was with a certain sense of suspicion and not much hope left that I triedthis mix-and-match-home-baked driver method and am delighted to say it worked perfectly as documented by FlixBuster above. Many,many thanks FlixBuster.
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