Author Topic: What's supposed to happen when you update your graphics card.  (Read 3014 times)

I tried to update my graphics card, then all of a sudden my PC crashed. When I reboot it, the screen doesn't come on. Any help?

What's supposed to happen is the computer will restart and boot up normally after updating the drivers.

What's supposed to happen is the computer will restart and boot up normally after updating the drivers.
PC screen won't come on, is that normal?


I think your email is being DDoS'd again

run in safe mode and switch back to the old drivers i guess


run in safe mode and switch back to the old drivers i guess
i can't the screen doesn't come on.
I think your email is being DDoS'd again
...
Dude I'm trying to be serious I have all my models I worked hard on saved on this PC. Also I have a light up keyboard and the lights turn off then when you press a key the lights flash.

Unplug your monitor from the graphics card and plug it into the motherboard then try to find out what the actual problem is. I'd recommend using Display Driver Uninstaller to completely remove all traces of any graphics drivers you've installed on your PC and then re-install the latest ones. graphics drivers love to conflict horribly with older versions of themselves in ways which don't make any sense.

well are you using a dvi cable then?

if so, replug it into your gpu

Unplug your monitor from the graphics card and plug it into the motherboard then try to find out what the actual problem is. I'd recommend using Display Driver Uninstaller to completely remove all traces of any graphics drivers you've installed on your PC and then re-install the latest ones. graphics drivers love to conflict horribly with older versions of themselves in ways which don't make any sense.
How would I uninstall them with no working monitor, I have no other monitors.

well are you using a dvi cable then?

if so, replug it into your gpu
I'm not.

How would I uninstall them with no working monitor, I have no other monitors.

Unplug your monitor from the graphics card and plug it into the motherboard then try to find out what the actual problem is. I'd recommend using Display Driver Uninstaller to completely remove all traces of any graphics drivers you've installed on your PC and then re-install the latest ones. graphics drivers love to conflict horribly with older versions of themselves in ways which don't make any sense.

Reading would probably be a good place to start

Reading would probably be a good place to start
oh lol I'm stupid I'll try

maybe you should install Norton Anti-Virus®