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Windows XP lacks a video driver.

Windows XP lacks a video driver.

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EpicMike115
Member
175
06-11-2016, 09:14 AM
#1
For the last year I've been attempting to run Windows XP natively on my 2014 Lenovo B50-70 laptop. Only recently did I manage to get it working after setting everything up perfectly yesterday—specifically installing it with E2B and ensuring the HDD was in MBR format. Soon after, I realized a major issue: there isn’t a single video driver available for either the integrated or AMD GPU. I searched extensively, tried various chipset drivers, but nothing helped. The system freezes without a working video driver, and video playback barely functions at around 25–30 frames per second when the window size is reduced. The GPUs in question are the Radeon R5 M230 and the Intel HD Graphics 4400. Anyone have suggestions on how to resolve this? Perhaps there’s a workaround to apply Windows 7 drivers to XP? I just enjoy using XP and found it fun.
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EpicMike115
06-11-2016, 09:14 AM #1

For the last year I've been attempting to run Windows XP natively on my 2014 Lenovo B50-70 laptop. Only recently did I manage to get it working after setting everything up perfectly yesterday—specifically installing it with E2B and ensuring the HDD was in MBR format. Soon after, I realized a major issue: there isn’t a single video driver available for either the integrated or AMD GPU. I searched extensively, tried various chipset drivers, but nothing helped. The system freezes without a working video driver, and video playback barely functions at around 25–30 frames per second when the window size is reduced. The GPUs in question are the Radeon R5 M230 and the Intel HD Graphics 4400. Anyone have suggestions on how to resolve this? Perhaps there’s a workaround to apply Windows 7 drivers to XP? I just enjoy using XP and found it fun.

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LewisS_1999
Member
100
06-16-2016, 10:21 PM
#2
2014 marked the final support period for XP, which explains why no drivers exist for it. Reviewed Lenovo's website and found only GPU drivers available for models 7 and newer. It seems unlikely that Win7 drivers would function on XP due to significant differences between the operating systems.
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LewisS_1999
06-16-2016, 10:21 PM #2

2014 marked the final support period for XP, which explains why no drivers exist for it. Reviewed Lenovo's website and found only GPU drivers available for models 7 and newer. It seems unlikely that Win7 drivers would function on XP due to significant differences between the operating systems.

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XxgamerxX1677
Member
214
06-17-2016, 08:19 PM
#3
It seems you discovered a compatible driver for an Intel GPU from around 2013 using Driver Booster PRO. What did you find?
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XxgamerxX1677
06-17-2016, 08:19 PM #3

It seems you discovered a compatible driver for an Intel GPU from around 2013 using Driver Booster PRO. What did you find?

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NoahWraith
Member
199
06-19-2016, 05:25 AM
#4
After installation, Windows XP now triggers a 0x50 PAGE_FAULT_IN_NONPAGED_AREA error right before the login screen. Perfect.
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NoahWraith
06-19-2016, 05:25 AM #4

After installation, Windows XP now triggers a 0x50 PAGE_FAULT_IN_NONPAGED_AREA error right before the login screen. Perfect.

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Mouse123
Member
69
06-19-2016, 07:45 AM
#5
It's a shame, but you can switch to safe mode and remove the driver.
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Mouse123
06-19-2016, 07:45 AM #5

It's a shame, but you can switch to safe mode and remove the driver.

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chikcken__
Junior Member
22
06-21-2016, 09:46 PM
#6
Intel drivers need to be accessible via a link, which is challenging compared to AMD. You might attempt 32-bit drivers for Windows 7, though I question their compatibility. Alternatively, using Windows XP 64-bit could work.
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chikcken__
06-21-2016, 09:46 PM #6

Intel drivers need to be accessible via a link, which is challenging compared to AMD. You might attempt 32-bit drivers for Windows 7, though I question their compatibility. Alternatively, using Windows XP 64-bit could work.

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209
06-25-2016, 05:37 PM
#7
It’s a fascinating finding; switching to VGA mode functions properly. The video driver is responding and being recognized. But since it’s running in VGA, the display stays at 640x480. When I attempt to raise the resolution, the screen glitches. Using 0x8E causes a page fault in an unpaged area. It seems possible this involves RAM—given that the GPU is integrated, it likely uses some of the system’s memory. Could this be affecting XP performance? I’m just exploring different options.
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timidgecko1134
06-25-2016, 05:37 PM #7

It’s a fascinating finding; switching to VGA mode functions properly. The video driver is responding and being recognized. But since it’s running in VGA, the display stays at 640x480. When I attempt to raise the resolution, the screen glitches. Using 0x8E causes a page fault in an unpaged area. It seems possible this involves RAM—given that the GPU is integrated, it likely uses some of the system’s memory. Could this be affecting XP performance? I’m just exploring different options.

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NeonNinja479
Junior Member
8
06-26-2016, 06:45 AM
#8
It seems the problem isn't related to RAM, more likely it's about a low pagefile or possibly the storage device. The GPU only needs around 1Gb of RAM, so unless the machine has less than 2Gb total, it shouldn't be an issue. WinXP 64-bit was quite uncommon, so that probably isn't the situation.
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NeonNinja479
06-26-2016, 06:45 AM #8

It seems the problem isn't related to RAM, more likely it's about a low pagefile or possibly the storage device. The GPU only needs around 1Gb of RAM, so unless the machine has less than 2Gb total, it shouldn't be an issue. WinXP 64-bit was quite uncommon, so that probably isn't the situation.