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Solve : Win7 drivers for HP753n? |
Answer» Uh-oh.... Basically you just talk to it nicely...and promise not to spill beverages on the keyboard... Hey, I am an old grumpy *censored*. I will try, but can not promise. Quote How did you "force" your machine to use XP drivers on Win 7? Upon running the Intel 845 chipset driver which was a EXE, Windows 7 complained that the driver was the incorrect driver for this OS or something along those lines. I ended up right-clicking on the EXE and telling it to run-as administrator and I forced Windows 7 to run that EXE. That EXE created a folder at the C: drive something like C:\Intel\XP\845GL as a path. I then went to device manager and right-clicked on the GPU which had a yellow ! mark and told it to update driver, then I pointed the path to the driver to the C:\Intel\XP\845GL and it displayed that it found the driver present, but that it was not a Windows 7 certified driver and I told it to apply this chipset driver which was meant for Windows XP to Windows 7 32-bit Home Premium. It took the driver and then I performed a reboot. Upon the reboot the system had no issues and now I was able to set the Intel 845GL GPU to 1024x768 with better than just 256 colors. I was then able to also run Youtube videos ok on it, although they had to run at 360p because the Intel 845GL GPU only had 64MB of shared memory ( where it allocates 64MB of the system RAM as GPU memory leaving 960MB of 1024MB free for the OS to function ) and this GPU is very weak to todays standards. The 2.53Ghz should run a little better than the 2.00Ghz Pentium 4 that I tested Windows 7 32-bit on as for in addition to the CPU being 530Mhz faster, the Pentium 4 CPU's evolved some between the 2Ghz and 2.53Ghz to handle more of a work load of processing with faster FSB, and 2x larger cache config, and 13 million more transistors in the single core design between my system and your Pentium 4 2.53Ghz. Mine http://ark.intel.com/products/27432/Intel-Pentium-4-Processor-2_00-GHz-256K-Cache-400-MHz-FSB vs Yours http://ark.intel.com/products/27441/Intel-Pentium-4-Processor-2_53-GHz-512K-Cache-533-MHz-FSB Pretty slick little maneuver there Dave... Thanks If that forcing of the EXE execution didnt work with the Windows 7 32-bit run-as administrator, I was going to run it from within a Virtual Windows XP environment and then copy the decompressed contents for that driver in the now file/folder form vs EXE form to the Windows 7 system, and then point Windows 7 to the driver that is now not tucked hidden behind an EXE that sometimes will not allow you to execute with the incorrect OS version as other drivers of incorrect OS or system build will error out if not run within their normal intended environment of execution. I have had to go this method a few times before... and then when it comes to Linux, wrapping drivers is always run too I used to use that maneuver all the time with Win2000 & WinXP trying to get Win98 drivers installed. My computers are all WinVista or Win7 but I do have a Pentium4 WinXP box I rescued from the curbside trash. It only gets turned on 2x/mo. for updating. Even with 3GB RAM, it's just too slow. The latest service pack (3) & security updates really slowed things down. Computers are so inexpensive now, it's not cost effective to upgrade old ones.You could also try installing Linux OS - Ubuntu or Mint instead. |
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