Device Ntpnp_pci0017 Windows 7 Driver
When I look into the properties, it says it's 'Device NTPNP_PCI0016' and is at 'PCI bus 5, device 0, function 0' I have no PCI device connected, never have, so I don't understand what all this is. The only USB things installed are my mouse and a printer. I *have* used the other usb ports to transfer things, but even removing them has done nothing. One other thing - when I was installing my board drivers it got stuck looping on the RAID drivers, wanting me to insert a floppy disk. But I don't even have a floppy drive installed and when I said 'no, don't make a floppy', it looped and got stuck in the same place. So I removed the cd and it booted fine.
You are welcome! By the way, what driver did it find? Did you happen to look before you closed the device manager? If not, no big deal. For me, when I get a new motherboard, I usually try to keep a directory of the drivers that I need to install after the OS is installed, so that I can check them for updates. Downloads for Intel® 82562 Fast Ethernet Controller. Drivers: Windows 7* Windows 7, 32-bit*. Includes Intel® PROSet for Windows Device Manager*.
Put the cd back in and back to the looping. Putting the cd back in also gave me NO option to bypass that driver.
ASRock Z68 Extreme3 Gen3 - ». Hardware ID's If you purchased the Motherboard yourself (which, I'm guessing you did), it should have came with a driver CD.
Device Ntpnp Pci0017 Driver Windows 7
I'm guessing this is the CD that you say does the 'looping thing' when you have it in and your computer boots. My suggestion would be to try to put that CD in after your system is up, and then right-click on the device, and select the choice to install the driver. I don't have the exact steps in front of me, but I know one of them allows you to point to the media that would have it. I would select the root of the cd that came with your motherboard, and let it search the full cd. It should be on there I'm thinking. If that does not work, you can try to find the driver yourself.
Device Ntpnp Pci0020 Driver
Windows 7 Driver Update
Each piece of hardware has a unique hardware ID that you can then put into google to figure out what it is. If you right-click on the hardware device, and then select properties. Then, click on the Details tab, and in the drop down menu (default should be Device description), select the one that says 'Hardware IDs' (see my picture). Eight days in september the removal of thabo mbeki pdf. If you post that here, we can then go to google to try to find what kind of device it is, and point you in the right direction for the missing driver. Oh.You said you have a USB printer?