I'm guessing the problem is related to shared resources which previously worked for the (now theoretically "old" and entry level) WX3100 and also for more flagship-type hardware, but now does not, with the higher-end cards sporting features which this one does not. I felt it would be due diligence to describe "the rest of the story" as it evolves. Removing the drivers from Windows update bought an additional 24 hours before the exact same problem happened. I did end up using the hack to add the "show/hide updates" facility. I have Windows 10/11 Pro I was able to do it through Group Policies to prevent Windows from installing drivers on my PC.ĮDIT: I tagged AMD Moderator of Professional GPU Cards but he seems to be unavailable for the time being wanted to chime in with a "Your mileage may vary" response, as I continue to tune and adjust the machine in question. NOTE: I just downloaded the tool and it is the same one I have.ĮDIT: I tagged AMD Moderator of Professional GPU Cards but he seems to be unavailable for the time being seems like you can't hide any Windows Updates anymore. Unfortunately, Microsoft has removed that specific tool from being downloaded.īut the same site I linked still has a download for that tool: The first method is using a Batch file to download and enable Group Policy in Home version.īUT if the above 3 methods doesn't work 100% you can use Microsoft Hide/Unhide Tool. Home doesn't have that option but I believe you can enable Group Policy feature which is hidden in Windows 10/11 Home version but this site shows how to enable it: I have Windows 10/11 Pro I was able to do it through Group Policies to prevent Windows from installing drivers on my PC. Yes seems like you can't hide any Windows Updates anymore. I welcome any questions or comments, and will update this if I find a fix. It seems like there should be a better way. I'd rather not go rooting through the registry and adding keys to change the update behavior. Windows 10 no longer has the update exclusion options it once had, and since this is Windows 10 Home, I don't have Group Policy controls. I don't mind periodically refreshing things, but on this machine it takes about 20 minutes to do the reinstall and two reboots, and that cuts into productivity quite a bit.ĭoes anyone out there have a hypothesis for what's happening here and/or how to fix it? Sometimes the problem will resurface when I'm away from the computer and the displays go to sleep, sometimes it will just relapse on its own and cut down to one display again. I ran the Radeon Software installer, with the Factory Reset option checked, as instructed in the KB for PA-300, and it works perfectly! Great news!. Naturally Radeon Software doesn't see anything and still does not launch at this point. I used Device Manager to roll back the driver, and it asks to restart, and gives me ONE display, running a "Microsoft Basic Display Driver" I look around for driver files to manually select a previous one, with limited success. I had Windows update look for other drivers locally AND via the web service, and it tells me it's all good. Now Windows Update sneaks a driver update in that it calls "Pci Bus" and the Radeon Software can't launch and errors out with a PA-300. This setup was largely problem-free for exactly a year. Worked great for running multiple displays without consuming a lot of power running high resolutions or refresh rates that I don't need. I'm running a not-exciting HP desktop with one of the Erica motherboards, a Ryzen 4600G, and a Radeon PRO WX3100.
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