
It could be that none of that will help, but all I can think of at the moment. There is also the driver that you can get directly from Realtek's site. So keep uninstalling & restarting until Realtek no longer appears under Sound.Controllers and "High Definition Audio Device" appears in its place. If you see "Realtek High Definition Audio" again, that means that there was another version of the Realtek driver on your hard drive, and Windows found and installed it. Go back to the Device Manager and look for "High Definition Audio Device". Because you removed the Realtek driver files, Windows will install its native audio driver, named "High Definition Audio Device".ħ. Put a check mark in the option to delete the driver software, and then ok.Ħ. Right click on "Realtek High Definition Audio".ĥ. Expand the "Sound, Video & Game Controllers" section.ģ. Open the Device Manager (find it in the Control Panel, or type devmgmt.msc into the search box).Ģ. To install an older driver, first completely remove the newer one.ġ. No automated tool can tell you if your page is accessible, but WAVE facilitates human evaluation and educates about accessibility issues. It provides visual feedback about the accessibility of your web content by injecting icons and indicators into your page. Dell released 3 for your model, which can be found here (WT = Win10). WAVE is a web accessibility evaluation tool developed by.

But even if it works, Windows 10 will probably reconfigure the system again to bring back the same issue.ī. Find a date from right before the problem and use that date. We are getting reports from several people about audio problems caused by Microsoft updates.
