You will probably need a new motherboard to fix it.
When the IDT driver is absent then Windows will automatically install its native HD audio driver, but that has not happened -- if it had you would not get the x in a circle. So it is not just an issue with the IDT driver. Also, when restoring to the factory image does not cure a problem that is because the problem was caused by a hardware failure, not software. Sorry.
Let me put it this way. You could get a usb audio adapter (they cost from very little to pricey) and get audio through either headphones or external speakers that you connect to the audio adapter's output jack. The reason that would work is because the usb audio adapter is a separate audio device from the audio device built onto the motherboard, so it doesn't matter if the internal device is working or not. An "audio device" in this sense is basically a digital-to-analog converter (DAC).
Bluetooth is out of my area. All I know about it is that it a wireless technology for use over very short distances. I am under the impression that bluetooth speakers have DAC's. If that is true then they are also "audio devices" in the sense I am talking about, and so should work just like a usb audio adapter does. A little more research is in order.
Jim Coates
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13.6K Posts
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December 6th, 2013 16:00
You will probably need a new motherboard to fix it.
When the IDT driver is absent then Windows will automatically install its native HD audio driver, but that has not happened -- if it had you would not get the x in a circle. So it is not just an issue with the IDT driver. Also, when restoring to the factory image does not cure a problem that is because the problem was caused by a hardware failure, not software. Sorry.
Nathan Krinsky
2 Posts
0
December 7th, 2013 10:00
Is there any way to trick it so it would work with say a Bluetooth speaker?
Jim Coates
4 Operator
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13.6K Posts
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December 7th, 2013 11:00
I'm not sure.
Let me put it this way. You could get a usb audio adapter (they cost from very little to pricey) and get audio through either headphones or external speakers that you connect to the audio adapter's output jack. The reason that would work is because the usb audio adapter is a separate audio device from the audio device built onto the motherboard, so it doesn't matter if the internal device is working or not. An "audio device" in this sense is basically a digital-to-analog converter (DAC).
Bluetooth is out of my area. All I know about it is that it a wireless technology for use over very short distances. I am under the impression that bluetooth speakers have DAC's. If that is true then they are also "audio devices" in the sense I am talking about, and so should work just like a usb audio adapter does. A little more research is in order.