Roll back means that the new operating system will be uninstalled and your actual OS will be restored. You can do this at anytime during the first 30 days after installing Win10.Roll back? What does that mean, genuinely curious.
Also I did backup before attempting to upgrade.
Try this driver Link Removed and try again.
What happens if you click confirm?
Roll back? What does that mean, genuinely curious.If it does do anything untoward you can always roll back, though I'd backup the system first.
Roll back means that the new operating system will be uninstalled and your actual OS will be restored. You can do this at anytime during the first 30 days after installing Win10.Roll back? What does that mean, genuinely curious.
Also I did backup before attempting to upgrade.
Huh, I didn't know that. Ok then, I'll try again later. If there's any other problem, I'll update here.Roll back means that the new operating system will be uninstalled and your actual OS will be restored. You can do this at anytime during the first 30 days after installing Win10.
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Ok, will try! Thanks!I have had the experience on an old acer. It will install, and use a generic driver, which works for average use. You can then , as said, try and install nmsuk's driver . For me, It would not accept, but the computer is able to do, without any problems, the light work I want from it.
I see... that's pretty unfortunate. ThanksThe expectations of getting Intel 4000 graphics series working (at least well) under Windows 10 is low. Most likely you will not find a driver that works, or will have to force one to install using Comparability mode and perhaps it will work for basic tasks. I hate to tell you this but if a laptop has 4000 series graphics it's not really a great candidate to upgrade to Windows 10 in the first place.