Or, you could just go out and buy four or five USB cards at random, hope you luck out and get the correct drivers installed, and see if any of those work. Next, check the blackmagic site and look for compatible hardware, which means parts that will actually work with it. Take the disk that came with the mobo and use it for a coaster, it is otherwise useless. Since you do not appear to have an NEC or NEC-Compatible chipset, you have wasted a lot of time, effort, and energy getting absolutely nothing done, and actually making your system less functional.įirst, in order to undo the screwup, go to asus site and download the latest drivers for your existing chipset.
THIS IS THE FIRST FREAKING THING YOU SHOULD HAVE VERIFIED. Installing NEC chipset drivers will ONLY work if you have an NEC or NEC-compatible chipset. IF YOU ARE NOT FAMILIAR WITH BIOS SETTING CHANGES, DO *NOT* REPEAT *NOT* MESS WITH THEM. That is an very bad combination.īIOS default settings almost certainly not needed, likely a waste of time, and may actually have caused a problem. The chipset on my card is ASM1142, and I don't know if this will work with other chipsets or with other devices with ASMedia chipsets.The blackmagic is extremely picky hardware, you have an Asus motherboard, and you don't know what you are doing. I read that many people have had Link issues with ASMedia USB controllers, so maybe this will be helpful info. 1: Install the latest Texas Instruments USB 3.0 XHCI Host Controller drivers. Uninstalling from Device Manager didn't do the trick because the USB controller just reappeared, along with the ASMedia driver that didn't work with Link. 12 d., Windows calls them : asmedia USB 3.0 eXtensible host controller. After that the driver was replaced by Microsoft's driver, and Oculus Link started to work. I had to uninstall the ASMedia driver by going to "Add or Remove Programs" in Windows, and from there uninstall " Asmedia ASM104x USB3.0 Host Controller Driver" (or similar). I searched for advice, and some people said that "use the Windows drivers instead", but I didn't know where and how to install them.įinally I found the solution.
But afterwards the Oculus app just flatly refused to recognize my Quest. The card has an ASMedia chipset, so of course I figured that I should install a driver provided by ASMedia.
So I also got a PCIe card to add a USB-C port to my PC. I recently bought the official link cable but my computer didn't have a USB-C port.