My Samsung Evo 860 Prompts For Mass Storage Controller Driver
2TB SSD: Samsung 850 Evo or 850 Pro? Thread starter Dave3000; Start date Jan 3, 2017; Sidebar Sidebar. Pretty quick for the rest of your games. Slow and cheap for mass storage. I'm getting ready to install the EVO and the Samsung driver for it. I'd just as well use the Sammy driver, as opposed to the downloadable Microsoft 'native. 'Samsung has led the NVMe SSD industry since its inception, and the company continues to define the latest standards of consumer storage with unprecedented performance of the 970 PRO and EVO SSDs,' said Un-Soo Kim, senior vice president of Brand Product Marketing, Memory Business at Samsung Electronics. I just got Samsung 840 Pro SSD, but my Windows 10 is not detecting it. Windows 10 not detecting Samsung 840 Pro SSD. How to enable Samsung EVO 840 mSATA SSD. Storage 465GB Samsung SSD 850 EVO 500GB (SATA (SSD)) 12 °C. 119GB Mass Storage Device USB Device (USB ) Seasonic Platinum 80+ 1000w Modular Razer Rakk Case Optical Drives. /monster-hunter-world-pc-download-time.html. 232GB Samsung SSD 860 EVO 250GB (SATA (SSD)) 30 °C Optical Drives No optical disk drives detected.
My Samsung Evo 860 Prompts For Mass Storage Controller Driver For Sale
- Mar 14, 2018 This is the unboxing and migration of data to a Samsung EVO 860 SSD. Link to Samsungs Website to download the Migration software: http://www.samsung.com/semi.
- Apr 19, 2018 - I am setting up my Samsung 860 EVO 1TB SSD and my computer can't. -Uninstalling and reinstalling drivers. Just in case it matters, my Windows is installed on a 250gb SSD. Open command prompt in windows with administrative privileges. Started by babicdusko; Mar 13, 2019; Replies: 1.
My Samsung Evo 860 Prompts For Mass Storage Controller Driver For Pc
My Samsung Evo 860 Prompts For Mass Storage Controller Driver For Windows
TL : DR
If there are no device drivers installed for an iPhone on my wife's system, then Windows 10 Pro 64 will install the drivers so that the iPhone will be recognized by Explorer as a Portable Device mass storage device, but iTunes will not recognize the phone. Once I install the usbaapl64 driver to get iTunes support, Windows actually disables or deletes the drivers for a Portable Device. On my system, both sets of drivers are installed and active, so I can access the phone either in iTunes or as a mass storage device so I can copy off photos in the DCIM folder.
Why the difference, and how to get my wife's Windows to allow both sets of drivers to be active at the same time?
The gory details:
On my wife's system about two months ago, she could no longer access her iPhone as a mass storage device (like a drive partition) so she could manually copy or move photos from the DCIM folder. iTunes was working normally.
My wife's system and mine are practically identical, both Win 10 Pro 64, with all updates installed. On my system, I can access my iphone in both iTunes and as a mass storage device. I can also accesss my wife's iphone as a mass storage device if I plug in to my system. So the issue is narrowed down to Windows driver support on my wife's system.
By way of background, I posted a more general question here iphone doesn't show up in MY COMPUTER on wife's system but does on min - Windows 10 Forums, and I also found this thread helpful Win 10 won't register new iPhone SE - Windows 10 Forums.
Today I spent time with phone support with both Apple and MS. The Apple support guy went through some issues with me and finally said that it was a Windows issue, and to call MS. So I did, and the MS guy told me that he thought it was a hardware problem and, get this, I should bring in the desktop system to a MS store for help. Yeah.
I used a useful tool called USBDeview, referenced in the second thread above. I also spent some 'quality time' with Device Manager. I found that if I set the HIDDEN DEVICES option on in Device Manager, I could actually see the iPhone as a Portable Device with WPD and WPDMTP drivers. So I deleted that device, and hoped that Windows would recognize the iPhone as a new device and re-install the mass storage drivers. Didn't happen.
Then I deleted the usbaapl64 drivers that are installed for Apple USB Mobile Device Driver, for iTunes. Once I did that, then Windows recognized a new device, and installed the Portable Device drivers, and Windows displayed the phone as a mass storage device. So far, so good, right? Then I re-installed the Apple USB Mobile Device Driver, for iTunes. At that point, Windows apparently uninstalled the Portable Device Drivers. I went through this process several times, and I can reliably reproduce this behavior.
This is wrong behavior. And I believe the Apple guy's view that this is a Windows issue.