Beyond that, literally nothing works unless someone can debug or rewrite the OGL DLLs for W10. Ergo, the installer and inf are perfectly fine the biggest culprit is likely Windows itself as up to build 1809 or so you can likely get the DLLs working with a compatibility administrator database file. The DLLs do in fact get installed (just check syswow64 and system32 folders) but they don’t load, trying to register the DLLs via an elevated command prompt by typing regsvr32 ig4icd64.dll then trying to register the 32bit DLL in syswow64 results in the same error being spat out the module failed to load. Unfortunately the latter (and a high probability of working) solution would require dumping a HD3000 vBIOS, modding it, then injecting it back into the system firmware, fixing checksums and flashing, so overall, not very after some more investigations it looks like the OGL DLLs are flat out broken or incompatible.
Not much left I can try, I’ll try editing the inf file to force it to use ig7icd DLLs rather than hacking the DLLs themselves to see if that works and I can try some older DLLs, another solution would be to change the device ID of the HD3000 so it thinks its a HD4000 but modify a driver to install HD3000 components. ++ Note: WDDM 1.3 features such as Miracast are not supported for these processors.ĭOWNLOAD hmm… well, this looks like it might be something that can’t be fixed outside of intel, the installer doesn’t like me editing the inf, I’ve tried making a Windows level fix that should work but doesn’t - at least not in 21H1 W10 builds, I’ve tried using different installers, no newer DLLs exist in other driver packages and I’ve even tried hacking the ig7icd DLLs to make them think they are ig4icd DLLs in case the issue is with the DLLs themselves. driver.Ģnd generation Intel(R) Core™ i3 / i5 / i7 processorsĢnd generation Intel(R) Core™ i5 / i7 vPro™ processors
No hardware H.264 encoding acceleration in software such as Handbrake with the Microsoft Windows Update (WU) 9.
UNOFFICIAL Windows10 (64bit) servicing drivers for intel HD3000 IGP by Ket Winraid bit better performance and/or compatibility. Perhaps the driver will clear up some bugs and give a don’t want to have to do it manually all the time. Package updating the HD3000 IGP with a little love for W10 64bit because I’m lazy and been able to remedy it, if someone fixes the problem it would be awesome to include the This problem exists with stock drivers on W10 and I have not bugged or need partially rewriting for Win10 compatibility. OpenGL capabilities beyond 1.1 does not work, one of, or all of, the following files are NOTE: Yes, I am aware there is a 3208 display audio driver I use the 3200 driver as that driver is intended for W10 3208 is for Win8.1.
You don’t need to do anything special to install these drivers, all digital signatures are in tact just extract the archive with IZArc or whatever your preferred archive utility is and run Setup.exe to install like you would any official intel driver. Only aim was to make a lazy mans shortcut so I have no idea what compatibility issues these drivers might resolve but unlike if you just let Windows install the 4459 driver through WU this package restores/maintains hardware encoding QuickSync capabilities with encoding software like Handbrake. driver package intel offer on their website.
In short, I’m lazy and don’t want to have to manually install updated driver components for the intel HD3000 IGP all the time so I made this package, the drivers are all newer than what you get from the vanilla 9.