Well, I have nothing. The laptop (obviously ) has a touchpad, but I don't see any Synaptics on neither Device Manager nor on Device Startup(using CCleaner). Any help on how to install the latest driver/software? The touchpad works though.
there not have any extra its in iso you choose which drivers want install..but if you trust this .. try find all drivers manually
10162 way better clean install so trying to be the good boy I did a clean install of 10130 then upgraded to 10162. Lots of issues. 2 main ones were my internet (Ethernet, not WiFi) was constantly spotty and the MS USB driver was causing my Bluetooth mouse to behave erratically. Using the vendor/MB drivers was the same or worse. Doing a full wipe and clean install of 10162, it's a very very very stable experience.
most of your issues with drivers and crap are caused by crappy premade walmart computers lol or dell acer some bad crap. building a custom pc or having a custom laptop built for you will give you less issues and better performance. and don't use legacy or your just hurting your pc switch to uefi
I beg to differ, I got my computer on sale at K-Mart, after THE RAIN e-mailed me, A Hxinso computer, 4 GB's of RAM, anyway it works good, I'm ready for RTM.
I have to ask... how? As far as I know, the only things affected for the most part between Legacy and UEFI boot is boot times. Some rare cases also have device initialization and resource allocation handled differently as well in a way the OS may not prefer, but I've only seen this become an issue with UEFI boots. There was a Windows 10 build a while back that caused BSoD issues with AMD switchable graphics laptops on UEFI, but Legacy was fine. I've also seen UEFI cause a Realtek HD audio chip not initialize, but worked fine on Legacy. Performance-wise, I have yet to see or hear of any actual performance improvements between Legacy and UEFI. The device hardware is still the same, and thusly, use the same drivers. If anything, UEFI can manage to cause more issues (hence above; also with certain graphics cards for example, the voltage is locked when the UEFI VBIOS is active). And the inconsistencies can also carry over on Linux too. There was a situation where UEFI boots with Linux on a certain Samsung device caused some overflow thing with NVRAM. Some distros (although rare) have weird setups with UEFI as well (openSUSE Tumbleweed was pretty bad on my desktop iirc). With all that said though, UEFI isn't all bad at all. If your computer does ship with UEFI, you should probably be using it (unless you have a known issue with it). Just only expect faster boot times as a benefit. TLDR: UEFI boot should be used, but Legacy is still known to cause less problems.
Personally, I didn't need an boot time of just a few seconds! Said that, UEFI isn't an must for me! And I also never was even think about an competition of Boot Times!! On the other hand, if you use a lot drives in the same computer with Hot Plug conditions, UEFI could force problems. In my computer at home, I use to have at least 6 HDD, 1 BD, 1 DVD and several USB 3.0 devices running, while the Drives are all in Hot Plug condition. I need to change quite often the drives because those drives content are sorted for different content. I use (e)SATA Remove Racks for those drives. As I don't like to use the bigger capacity drives, most of mine are SATA3 500GB drives, it assures that in case of Hardware problems with the drives, the momentum or permanent loss is much more limited than by an TB or bigger drive. In fact, the TB's I also have, I use mainly for 'rubbish' data, not important because of the problems I already was having several times with them, while the lower capacity drives, I've a total of 27 in use at this time, I had only one down over the last 5 years. Don't use SSD's at all after having with all I had, problems, mainly Power Source related (in Thailand the Power isn't very good!)! And from 3 burned SSD's I was able to claim just one while all were under warranty!! So, I stay with conventional HDD's. Also I'm not a Gamer, just use to play with some Flight Sims, and didn't need those much resources some Games need. For normal work, the performance is much enough for my use. Therefore, I use legacy mode only and that works just very well (for me)!
I have changed my pc over the past week, ive ditched the old one and bought these, Corsair (CW-9060019-WW) Hydro Series H110i GT 280mm Extreme Performance All-In-One Liquid CPU Cooler,Asus Intel Rampage V Extreme USB 3.1 Motherboard,Intel i7 5930K CPU Processor (3.50GHz, 15MB Cache, 140W, Socket 2011-V3), G Skill Ripjaws 4 F4-2666C15Q-32GRR 32GB Kit DDR4-2666 MHz Unbuffered Non-ECC Memory Modules with Heatspreader - Red,Samsung SM951 256GB M.2 Solid State Drive, using the uefi things are absolutely brilliant the pc runs great no complaints about anything plus asus has done new windows 10 drivers for the motherboard which runs even better now on windows 10