16.10.2019

Actualizar Drivers Asus A541uj

  1. Asus Express Gate Download
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  3. Asus A541uj Bios Update

» » AsusLooking for RAM Memory and SSD upgrades for your Asus computer?They are all here on this one page. All the RAM Memory, SSDs and accessories needed to upgrade your Asus AIO, any series notebook, Zenbook, desktop or motherboard.Just start with the 'select a series' box on the left and the configurator will direct you to the correct RAM memory, SSDs and accessories for your model every time.You can call, chat or email our upgrade team at anytime, we love helping people choose the right upgrade to extend the life of their computer.Money back guarantee for 100% compatibility. No questions asked refund policy.

Asus Express Gate Download

These laptops have ASUS SonicMaster-enhanced 3W transmission line speakers with 24cc audio chambers for truly powerful audio delivery, and an ergonomic.

Lifetime warranty on RAM Memory, five years on SSDs. Local technical staff available to assist you at any time. Welcome to the Upgradeable Asus model page. You can quickly search our database and find your model and what upgrades you can buy to improve its performance.Start by clicking on the 'find your model series' box. A drop down list of models should appear.Choose what series your computer belongs to, such as Zenbook.

  • User's Manual for Traditional Chinese Edition. Downloaded DOWNLOAD. Version SW119662016/11/04 update 6.74 MBytes.
  • The Driver Update Tool – is a utility that contains more than 27 million official drivers for all hardware, including asus keyboard driver. This utility was recognized by many users all over the world as a modern, convenient alternative to manual updating of the drivers and also received a high rating from known computer publications.

Step 2 is clicking in the next box 'Select a Model' and all the models in that series will appear. Scroll to choose your model.When you find your model, selecting it will make all the upgrade options appear.If you have any problems, please contact us via our online contact form or call our office. We appreciate all feedback, it helps improve our service. All upgrades are sent out with instructions which outlines how the upgrade should be installed.The best source for detail instructions is your user manual that came with the Asus computer.If it is a desktop you have to open up the case and look for the memory slots, once you have found them gently push the locks open on either side so you can insert the new memory in (This is also how you get old memory out). When installing the memory make sure you push the memory in firmly until the locks close on the module locking it in place.If it is a laptop look on the bottom of the laptop for any a door that is fixed in place with screws. Unscrew the screws and lift the door up.

This should reveal the memory that is currently installed in the computer. Pull the metal bars either side of the module back a bit and pop the old modules out. Once the old module is out you can slot the new module in and push it down so it locks in place (should look exactly the same as the old one did). If you can not find a door on the bottom of the laptop you can have a look at the manual that came with the laptop which often tells you where the memory slots are. This is one of the most common questions we are asked.The short answer is yes, but only if you have a notebook or desktop.A large majority of notebooks have 2 memory slots which can be upgraded with either one of two modules.

Many of these are shipped with 2 low-density modules of matching capacity.However when upgrading these types of notebooks you do not have to remove both modules and put in a matching pair. It is just as effective to keep 1 of the existing modules and replace the other one with a large capacity module.Most desktops have a similar set up. They generally have 2 or 4 memory slots that are upgradeable. Many times they are shipped with a matching pair. However when upgrading you need only to add one module at a time regardless whether the device was shipped with 1 module or 2 originally. Your Asus motherboard will run quite happily with 3 modules assuming it has 4 or more memory slots.

Then you should consider replacing your existing HDD with an SSD(solid state drive)Upgrading the memory in your computer is usually the first step to increasing it's performance. Additional memory allows you to run more applications simultaneously without the computer slowing down. It also allows you to multi-task to a much greater degree as your applications, email, web browsing, etc.

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All have more RAM to use to run efficiently.However additional RAM does not solve all the issues of a 'slow' computer. If you find that it takes the latest OS a long time to load or your spreadsheets are taking minutes before they are ready to use, then you should consider swapping out your old spinning HDD for an SSD.SSDs will run up to 12 times faster then a HDD and will have the OS loading and ready to use within seconds instead of minutes. All complex programs, high res video, complex audio and other large applications will load, ready to use, within seconds instead of taking several minutes before being ready to utilise.In a working environment, waiting minutes each time a new program loads or for your computer to be ready to use, is a time consuming and costly exercise. Added up, wait times increase to hours lost when totaled over the course of just a week.None of us here have that kind of time to waste, do you? G'dayI am investigating the possibility of upgrading my G73, with the latest & greatest.It was purchased in 2010, and lately I have been getting the bluescreen of death, and event logs suggesting my entire system, ie. BIOs, RAM is in dire straits.I wish to keep in going for my son.Any assistance very much appreciated.PeterAnswer: This is a snapshot my whats installed in my system.Peter To: Subject: Thank you for sending us an enquiry From: Date: Mon, 23 Nov 2015 17:12:10 +1100 Thank you for sending us an enquiry, it has been added to our Helpdesk system. You will be hearing from us shortly.

Please quickly review your message below, if it is not clear or you would like to add or clarify some information, just reply to this email and it will be added to the helpdesk ticket and our Upgradeable Team will see the additional note. Your Message - G'day I am investigating the possibility of upgrading my G73, with the latest & greatest. It was purchased in 2010, and lately I have been getting the bluescreen of death, and event logs suggesting my entire system, ie. BIOs, RAM is in dire straits. I wish to keep in going for my son.

Any assistance very much appreciated. Peter.

Hi GuysI have a Asus K61IC Notebook that has 2GB of RAM installed. From all the information I can find it would appear that this computer can use up to 6GB of RAM.I wish to expand the RAM but want to know because it only has two sim slots will a 2GB and a 4GB sim work together without any problems?Many ThanksRayAnswer: Ray,Yes, you can mix and match RAM on this notebook. The RAM is addressed independently and it is the same whether you have one module and one empty slot or 2 mismatched modules. Here is the link for the 4gb module.RegardsKeith. I have an Asus F541S. I would like to know if the ram can be upgraded?

What can I do to make it faster?Answer: To make a notebook faster, upgrading the RAM and upgrading to a SSD are your two best options.It is best to check if your RAM is soldered on board or a replaceable module. If you have 4GB you can replace with an 8GB module. It would use aIf you already have 8GB, it would be at its maximum, unless you have a spare RAM slot.The next option would be replacing your hard drive with a new SSD.

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Computer Model: X55 Series X55Sv NotebookName: CherylCurrent hard drive size: 1TBPreferred new SSD size: 1TBType of installation: Fresh InstallationAnswer: Cheryl,The X55Sv, though on the older side, is more then capable of swapping out the existing HDD with an SSD as it has a SATA connector. Below is a link for the Crucial M550 SSD.

Crucial SSDs are constructed with high density chips which allows them to run more efficiently and thus last longer then other SSDs also whilst achieving the rated speeds via the hardware and not a software tweak that other SSD makers use.In stock and ready to ship today.RegardsKeith.

Hello everybody,Since 2 days i'm running into troubles with the installation of Windows 7 on an Asus notebook X751MA with pre-installed Windows 8.1.The first manipulations i've done in BIOS are:. Security tab - Secure boot on Disable.

Boot tab - Launch CSM on Enable. Set first boot option on DVD-ROM.The computer boots on the Windows 7 DVD, I see the progress bar with the sentence 'Windows is loading the files.' When the progress bar is finished, the 'Starting Windows' with the animated logo appears and 5 seconds later, a Blue Screen is displayed with the following information:The BIOS in this system is not fully ACPI compliant.Please contact your system vendor for an update BIOS. Roland d 05 driver. It may be that you don't need CSM enabled to install Win7.

You want to try to install it to UEFI first anyway, and that doesn't always require CSM. So highlight the CSM setting and see what it says in the Help text at right for Enabled and Disabled. Then try disabling it, boot the DVD and look for a choice in Boot Menu for EFI DVD drive.

You must boot the DVD as a EFI or UEFI device!Make sure the SATA configuration which we cannot see is also set to AHCI.If this fails, reset the BIOS to defaults, then try booting the DVD as a UEFI device again. If this fails check that Secure Boot remains disabled. This is the only setting on every EFI BIOS which must be disabled to Install Win7.

If this fails, then try Enabling CSM again but no more.Report back results on each of the above. The good news is that in the past year we've only had one EFI BIOS that couldn't install Win7.

Most have caught up their firmware to the market's overwhelming desire for Win7 and absolute loathing of the flop Win8. Ok, I'm back with the results and they are not good.So here is what I've done:. Save & Exit - Restore to Default.

Security - Security boot menu - Security boot on Disabled. Boot - Boot option #1 on UEFI DVD Windows 7 x64I've let Launch CSM on Disabled, Fast Boot on Enabled and SATA Configuration on AHCI, these are their default value.The PC boots on the Windows 7 DVD in UEFI, there is the progress bar with the sentence 'Windows is loading the files.' Then the 'Starting Windows' with the animated logo appears but instead of a Blue Screen popping up, the screen is frozen with a red artifact at the top of it (see the attached crappy picture).Back to the BIOS, I've changed the following:. Boot - Launch CSM on EnabledUnfortunatly, I get the same 0xA5 error at the same place but it's displayed at least. I have two options in sata configuration: AHCI and IDE. CSM enabled/Non UEFI Device/AHCI - Same error.

CSM enabled/Non UEFI Device/IDE - Same error. CSM disabled/Fast boot Disabled/UEFI Device/AHCI - Screen frozen. CSM disabled/Fast Boot Disabled/UEFI Device/IDE- Screen frozen. CSM disabled/Fast boot enabled/UEFI Device/AHCI - Screen frozen. CSM disabled/Fast Boot enabled/UEFI Device/IDE- Screen frozenI can't set my partitions, I can't even reach the Langage selection menu, the Blue screen occurs before.

I just checked your specs and see 32 bit Win7. Tell me you're not trying to install 32 bit to UEFI? Do you have 64 bit ISO for your licensed version?Where did you get the Win7 installation disk? How is it possible to have a laptop with sufficient hardware to run Windows 7 and not being able to install it?

Well, if I knew it I certainly wouldn't have bought the X751MA. With all respect to you, i won't blame Asus for this. They designed this laptop specifically to run 'Win8.1' and nothing else. On the official product specification page ( ), only Windows 8 is listed as the supported OS.I have seen an option in some Asus laptops to set the BIOS to be compatible with either 'Win8' or 'Win7'. This item will be usually located under 'Advanced' menu ( named 'OS selection' or so, can't remember exact name ).

Most of the modern 'Lenovo' laptops also has similar OS selection option in BIOS.An example:Enabling the 'Windows 7' mode will usually disables the new ACPI features which are not compatible with 'Windows 7'. Your BIOS doesn't seems to have such an option. Anyway you are safe in Greg's hand as he will find a way to install 'Win 7' on that laptop if it's possible somehow:).Btw, at least you are able to disable 'SecureBoot' and enable 'CSM' mode. But this may not be possible with upcoming laptops as it is no longer mandatory to have an off switch for 'SecureBoot' in BIOS. It's up to the OEM manufacturer to whether include an option to disable 'SecureBoot' or not. Similar help and support threadsThreadForumI am trying to downgrade a dell inspiron 3531 from 8.1 to 7 by using a memory stick but when booting from from the usb stick it loads files and just comes up with bios not fully acpi compliant error.

Have been told to install with a dvd but havn't tried this yet. Read a few threads about this error.Hardware & DevicesUpdating your Alienware to Bios level A08 from A06 will result in your Windows 7 system booting to a BSOD.

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Nothing you can do will repair this except reloading A06 again. If your Alienware has M2 SSD with Windows 10 loaded, you can use this system to downgrade to A06. Then Windows 7 is happy again.BSOD Help and SupportI purchased a new ASUS laptop with Win8. I wanted to replace it with Win7. I wiped, formatted and partitioned the HD. I changed the BIOS so it boots from the DVD. I put my 7 disc in and started.

Asus A541uj Bios Update

A message says it is loading files. In a minute or so I get the Blue Death Screen with the.Installation & SetupBefore I get into the details of the issue I want to point out that this computer was running Windows 7 fine without any bsod or other errors for about 6 months. 6 months ago I performed a wipe/ restore of my system drive to clean out the crud that windows/programs build up over time. Windows 7 had.BSOD Help and SupportFor about 5 weeks my pc would not boot up properly and i eventually discovered that one of my ram chips was faulty so i replaced it and now works only upto 3 gig with windows 64 bit but when i install the 4th chip i get a Bsod with the message this bios is not Acpi compliant so i went to the.General DiscussionOur SitesSite LinksAbout UsFind Us.