



It's literally just because they're for a different product. I've looked a bit into the SD card drivers provided in ROG Ally's support page and it seems like it's actually the wrong drivers being provided, not because the drivers aren't 64-bit (and further evidenced by a different commenter here). Google "disable Windows driver updates" for that. There are many ways to disable that feature, registry tweaks are the most reliable, since windows likes to turn things back on automatigally without your consent. Windows WILL install broken drivers at some point and create problems, it's only a matter of time. This is a perfect opportunity to learn that you should disable Windows handling driver updates asap, on all your PCs. I read comments of people having that driver "updated" by windows. Browse to the folder you unzipped before and select the file from there. Right click it - update driver - browse my computer for drivers - Let me pick from a list of device drivers on my computer ‘Have Disk…’.

something" on the list (I don't remember exactly, but it was the only device starting with SD). Instead, open device manager (search it in start menu) find "sd. This driver from Intel's site works fine and I can finally use my SD with no issues.īefore, every time I would plug an sd card the whole system would freeze or become very slow.ĮDIT: for the people unfamiliar with manually installing drivers (opening any of the files inside the zip will not do anything) No, installing the driver from Asus doesn't do anything because its not even a 64bit driver! Windows still uses their own driver after you install that.If you extract the package from Asus (not install) and try to manually install that driver from the device manager, windows will tell you its not a 64bit driver, so it can't be used! Asus REALLY messed up with this one. No, it will not be fixed with formatting.
