

But at least MMC, SD and the COM ports are there!

It is for Intel Atom but installs itself correctly on the UDOO and seems to fix all the device problems, except for one GPIO controller and I2C, which are still not working. But this was an important hint, as they were now called "Intel Celeron/Pentium" and that suggested me to try installing a package not specific for Braswell (which doesn't exist for Windows 7).ĥ) And so, after some search, I found a driver package on the Intel site ( PROC_IO_Win7_32_64_1.zip): It installed the SMBUS driver but didn't enable the other devices, only changed their names. Many devices were not found or not working:Ĥ) Then I installed a chipset driver ( k1chp06us17_7.exe) found on the Lenovo site: In my case:ġ) I had to disable MMC and SD from BIOS during setup to avoid weird errors about unaccessible partitions and "cannot install on this hardware".Ģ) The BIOS (v.102) setting for keyboard and mouse works but is quite volatile, it often resets itself at boot and has to be reenabled every time.ģ) Once in W7 I installed the required drivers (see above). The installation of Ubuntu went smoothly as expected, while W7 was a bit tricky, as suggested above. On my UDOO Ultra I have installed at the moment both Ubuntu 17.0.4 and Windows 7 from DVD (not USB stick). Please, please, please, post anything else you find. Finally, I plugged a USB 2 hub into the Udoo and plugged the portable drive into that, and it works. Windows could not find a driver for my WD My Passport portable drive that houses all my backup files. There is a quirk that had me sweating though. There are still some unknowns in my device manager, but I haven't found anything that affects my regular usage of Adobe Suite, Microsoft Office, and coding tools. Load those drivers, and you're good to setup wifi and download Windows Updates. The tricky part was that once Windows installed, I lost my keyboard access after logging into Windows but still had my mouse (this may or may not happen to you), so I booted into Ubuntu, downloaded the following files and dropped them into my Windows desktop folder.ġ0. Start it up, push Escape repeatedly, and choose to boot from the thumb drive.ħ. Plug your installation thumb drive into the Udoo.Ħ. Download and use this utility to add usb 3 support to the thumb drive. I followed the steps here to make my bootable USB thumb drive. Go into BIOS and enable keyboard and mouse for Windows under Other Configuration.ģ. It came in handy later when I needed to access the Windows installation on the 128gb M.2 ssd.Ģ. These are the steps I took to get Windows 7 working on my Udoo.ġ. Please add to this as you find new drivers and whatnot.
