- Jun 30, 2004
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I should probably continue forward to hunt this down at the ASUS forum or website. Perhaps I should even post the following at the forum there, too.
This is not the sort of problem even the modest enthusiast may experience.
I recently replaced 20+-year-old PS/2 KVM switch with a 4K-capable, DVI/USB switch. I favored the DVI connection because it insures 144Hz refresh instead of 60. Whatever I do for my latest system must also integrate with the older ones.
So -- I regret now -- that I purchased this Emerson/Avocent DVI/USB KVM which allows for all of that. I was first unhappy that it wasn't HDCP compliant, when straight-through DVI-to-DVI is guaranteed to be. Luckily, my monitor also acts as the "V" part of a KVM. So I have to use both hands when switching.
With the Skylake system, the KVM was connected to one of the USB2 ports at the narrow top of the I/O plate. When I would boot into Windows 7, I could always count on the keyboard and mouse to be functional at boot time.
But when any of the following needed to occur or just happened to do so:
== Switching restarts between OSes
== [Other, non-USB] driver changes in Win 10
== BSODs - which I can still count using two hands for the time since I first put this system together
then, the keyboard connected to the KVM and the mouse as well come functional at the boot menu (selecting 7 versus 10), and then fail to function at the logon screen.
Plugging a second keyboard -- mine is PS/2 through PS/2-to-USB adapter -- I can restart the system again, even though the mouse will not function until I similarly swap it to a direct PC connection or plug in a handy wireless mouse.
Usually, this would sort itself out. Maybe I would enter BIOS just to inspect the settings, puzzled about the HID problem.
I am currently experimenting at the moment with the KVM-to-PC connected to the PC's USB 3.0 port at the I/O plate.
After I made the switch -- leaving the system in its win desktop status and switching to another computer system so I could re-deploy the USB plug at the I/O plate -- it all seems fine.
ASUS had needed to publish a utility for slipstreaming a USB3 driver to Windows 7, or it would not continue the install process from the original disc. I have read here or elsewhere that the USB2 ports of the motherboard are really controlled by the USB3 controller.
HAS ANYONE ELSE EXPERIENCED SIMILAR PROBLEMS -- WITH DUAL-BOOT? WITHOUT DUAL-BOOT? WITH KVM SWITCH? WITHOUT KVM SWITCH?
WHAT WAS YOUR EXPERIENCE IN RESOLVING THE PROBLEM?
My troubleshooting continues, and I may come back with more observations.
UPDATE: Using the USB3 port seemed to have resolved occurrence of the problem when OS-switchover Restarts occur. I don't think this happens with Windows 7, or I would not have gone so far with this dual-boot setup. Now -- what happens with an IRST driver reinstall or something else, have to wait and see. . . .
This is not the sort of problem even the modest enthusiast may experience.
I recently replaced 20+-year-old PS/2 KVM switch with a 4K-capable, DVI/USB switch. I favored the DVI connection because it insures 144Hz refresh instead of 60. Whatever I do for my latest system must also integrate with the older ones.
So -- I regret now -- that I purchased this Emerson/Avocent DVI/USB KVM which allows for all of that. I was first unhappy that it wasn't HDCP compliant, when straight-through DVI-to-DVI is guaranteed to be. Luckily, my monitor also acts as the "V" part of a KVM. So I have to use both hands when switching.
With the Skylake system, the KVM was connected to one of the USB2 ports at the narrow top of the I/O plate. When I would boot into Windows 7, I could always count on the keyboard and mouse to be functional at boot time.
But when any of the following needed to occur or just happened to do so:
== Switching restarts between OSes
== [Other, non-USB] driver changes in Win 10
== BSODs - which I can still count using two hands for the time since I first put this system together
then, the keyboard connected to the KVM and the mouse as well come functional at the boot menu (selecting 7 versus 10), and then fail to function at the logon screen.
Plugging a second keyboard -- mine is PS/2 through PS/2-to-USB adapter -- I can restart the system again, even though the mouse will not function until I similarly swap it to a direct PC connection or plug in a handy wireless mouse.
Usually, this would sort itself out. Maybe I would enter BIOS just to inspect the settings, puzzled about the HID problem.
I am currently experimenting at the moment with the KVM-to-PC connected to the PC's USB 3.0 port at the I/O plate.
After I made the switch -- leaving the system in its win desktop status and switching to another computer system so I could re-deploy the USB plug at the I/O plate -- it all seems fine.
ASUS had needed to publish a utility for slipstreaming a USB3 driver to Windows 7, or it would not continue the install process from the original disc. I have read here or elsewhere that the USB2 ports of the motherboard are really controlled by the USB3 controller.
HAS ANYONE ELSE EXPERIENCED SIMILAR PROBLEMS -- WITH DUAL-BOOT? WITHOUT DUAL-BOOT? WITH KVM SWITCH? WITHOUT KVM SWITCH?
WHAT WAS YOUR EXPERIENCE IN RESOLVING THE PROBLEM?
My troubleshooting continues, and I may come back with more observations.
UPDATE: Using the USB3 port seemed to have resolved occurrence of the problem when OS-switchover Restarts occur. I don't think this happens with Windows 7, or I would not have gone so far with this dual-boot setup. Now -- what happens with an IRST driver reinstall or something else, have to wait and see. . . .
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