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With the benefit of hindsight, you should have created a system image before upgrading to Windows 10, as you did not have such a DVD.
With the benefit of hindsight, you should have created a system image before upgrading to Windows 10, as you did not have such a DVD.
Win 10, on my PC's (and client's that I installed it on) installed sound and network drivers during the installation. Check the ASUS documentation on how to access the CMOS (BIOS) backup battery to do a full BIOS reset. Doing the reset from the BIOS options sometimes does not fully clear it and you have to either remove the battery (for at least 10 minutes - Intel says 15 minutes) or in some cases there is a jumper to fully reset.
If the reset (clear) does not help I would suspect a Win 10 corruption, another "clean" install of Win10 is the next step. I would use the Media Creation Tool and download Win 10, not reuse what you have.
You can download the media creation tool (and Win 10) from Microsoft HERE
Ah. Opening up the laptop requires a torx screwdriver which i do not have. Will try reinstalling windows first till I get one.
Edit: Reinstalling windows 10 once again did not help
Last edited by nobodomon; 22 Dec 2016 at 13:38.
Are you 100% sure that you have downloaded the right drivers? A laptop model can have multiple editions with different LAN manufacturers. For example; Realtek Ethernet, Intel Ethernet, Broadcom etc.
Open up a run dialog with Windows key + R ( Already have said this sentence 5 times in this thread, but why not again lol xD)
Type in "msinfo32"
Look for "System name" or "System model"