Screen turns black upon login, showing only the cursor and the Windows key.
Screen turns black upon login, showing only the cursor and the Windows key.
From Device Manager, check available devices. If no drivers are listed, ensure the system recognizes them. Confirm installation status and resolve any missing driver issues.
It seems the Display Adapter is still active despite your uninstallation attempts. Check if a corrupted BIOS file on the card might be the issue.
It seems to be highlighting the importance of the Microsoft Basic Display Adapter, likely emphasizing its value.
It’s okay. You need something to display on your screen. Otherwise, your screen will enter sleep mode and you’ll lose everything. Every GPU follows a specific minimum setting based on an old standard that all operating systems include with the necessary drivers, even the UEFI used to load images. That’s why Safe Mode behaves this way. If the issue persists even with the Microsoft Basic Display Adapter, I’m running out of ideas. I have no clue about what you’ve done or used on your system. Windows might be corrupted—maybe a registry cleanup, a system restart during an update, a bad operating system installation, or corrupted drive data. What I’m thinking is, in Safe Mode, try creating a local account and see if it loads normally in regular mode. If not, consider using System Restore to revert your system back to a working state before it stopped functioning. Be sure to back up your files first, especially if your drive is faulty or the situation is unfortunate.
It seems like you're considering trying an older driver from NVIDIA to see if it helps. It might be worth a try, but make sure you're comfortable with the process and understand the potential risks.
But if it didn't function or showed no signs of enhancement with the standard drivers, I doubt it will. I was hoping you'd confirm it works before it stops, otherwise I'd assume the fix was applied—like updating or reinstalling the Nvidia drivers if needed.
I noticed that reference elsewhere. Should I turn off Windows Update at startup? It might be contributing to the issue. Removing the GPU and using integrated graphics could help too. Other potential causes are worth checking as well. You're considering a full reinstall, which seems like a strong option if problems persist.
I completed the driver update, but it didn’t work as planned. I noticed that when running commands in admin mode (such as using cmd), it prompts for authorization. This makes me question whether the issue lies with the desktop environment or an error in explorer.exe. I plan to investigate further.