Alpr wrote:
-I've tried removing the computer battery and putting it back in
Do you mean the CMOS battery? If so, try it again and this time leave it out for 30 minutes. I should probably tell you that I had no idea what a CMOS battery was until about 7 minutes ago when I Googled it, so I really don't know what else it it controls besides your BIOS settings. Proceed with caution.
Alternatively, you could try re-enabling your adapter blindly. This is the method I used to access my adapter, with the keyboard, on Windows 7. This is really all the help I can offer, I'm sorry it's not the most elegant method.
-Turn your computer on. Wait a few minutes so it's all loaded and stuff.
-Press The "Windows" button on your keyboard.
-Type "change display settings", this will be typed in the search field.
-Press Enter.
-Press Tab four times to navigate to the "Advanced settings" link.
-Press the Space Bar.
-Press it again to click the "Properties" button in your graphics card Adapter tab.
-Press Tab three times to navigate to the tabs in this window.
-This is where our paths might diverge. You'll need to access the "Driver" tab in this window. For me, it's one tab to the left, so that only requires pressing the LEFT button once. It may be different for you.
-Assuming we're still on the same page, press Tab four times to navigate through the buttons on this window.
-Right now, I'm on the "Disable" button, in the Driver tab. I'm guessing, for you, the button is "Enable". Anyway, I'm too scared to click it, so you're on your own from here. I'm guessing you'll just need to press Enter once, or maybe twice for confirmation.Statistics: Posted by Jackstick — November 11th, 2011, 10:21 pm
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