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Dell m6800 driver disk 1080p#
I do use a USB Logitech HD Webcam C615 1080p camera I have had for years and it works just fine. My M6800 does NOT have a Webcam so IDK the answers to if yours will work or not.
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Dell m6800 driver disk drivers#
The High Sierra installation indicates that the SATA drivers running on it uses the Intel 8 Series Chipset with no TRIM support. I have my High Sierra installed on my SK hynix SH920 SSD with the Apple File System (APFS) though it is not suggested for Hackintosh, it works fine on this machine. I am currently running a vanilla macOS High Sierra 10.13.4 with the 2.4 GHz Intel Core i7 (Haswell E). I have 12GB of DDR3 1600MHz Ram installed in 3 separate Banks/DIMM slots.
Dell m6800 driver disk install#
I think that it may just be easier to do a fresh install of Windows since I haven't been able to find anything about going from Raid to AHCI.Building a CustoMac Hackintosh: Buyer's GuideĪttached is my Clover Bootloader Folder and the KEXT drivers I used to install and run macOS High Sierra on my Dell M6800 with NVIDIA Quadro K3100M 4GB GFX Card. After using Linux and I reboot into Windows the time is out of wack and I simply have Windows change the time from my default on line time source. The only issue that I am happy to deal with is the way Linux and Windows handles the system time is different. If the Linux HD is not plugged in Windows boots normally because nothing has been changed on the Windows install HD. When the HD is plugged in and the BIOS is set to look at USB drives for an OS before looking at the internal HDs GRUB is quickly displayed and if I do not select Windows manually in GRUB Linux will boot normally. Many distros installers ask where you want the boot loader to be installed (the default is in the root of the C drive) when installing Linux to an external HD I have GRUB installed to that drive. The version of Linux I use works well with GPT UEFI and the safest way and easiest way I have found to use Linux in a dual boot system is to install it to an external USB or eSATA hard drive. Thanks for your reply, I have already tried setting to AHCI and the system cannot find an OS. If this is possible what do I need to do to accomplish this? I also want to set up this laptop to dual boot with Linux, would switching to AHCI allow this or would I have to switch to Legacy mode? I know that for earlier versions of Windows if the HD was set up for ATA mode you could edit the registry to enable the switch to AHCI mode without having to reinstalling the OS. I am not interested in setting up a Raid array and was wondering if switching to AHCI mode is possible without needing a reinstall of Windows 10 Pro. This laptop along with the mSATA SSD has two additional HD bays and if you buy a HD cady to replace the optical drive will give you the ability of having 3 internal HDs. If I leave this Raid setting and install additional HDs do I actually have to configure them as a Raid? At the moment with the current Raid setting and only the one SSD the boot time is greatly delayed while the Bios is looking for HDs that are already a Raid or that can be configure as a Raid. The default set up that Dell uses on this laptop is UEIF Raid, there are other options as well the other one is AHCI as well as a Legacy setting that would allow the installation of I think Windows 7. I recently purchased a refurbished Dell Precision M6800 laptop that currently has one drive installed, a 256GB mSATA SSD.