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HP Recommended

Yes. 

 

You wouldn't see a PCIe Gen 4.0 NVMe slot in any notebook PC unless it came with an Intel 11th Gen or newer core processor.

HP Recommended

Hello Paul ,
What is the technical difference between a stock DAOX38MBAFO-Rev.F motherboard graphics card and a new DAOX38MBAGO-Rev.G motherboard?
- Does the M2 SSD slot have the same PCI specifications?
- Is it Gen 3 or Gen 4?
- Will a new driver be required once installed?
Thanks

HP Recommended

Hello Akemy,
What is the technical difference between a stock DAOX38MBAFO-Rev.F motherboard graphics card and a new DAOX38MBAGO-Rev.G motherboard  ?
- Does the M2 SSD slot have the same PCI specifications ?
- Is it Gen 3 or Gen 4 ?
- Will a new driver be required once installed ?
Thanks

HP Recommended

Hi:

 

Unfortunately, I would have no idea what the difference is, but as I replied yesterday, if the board has the same processor, the NVMe slot is PCIe Gen 3.0.

 

I recommend that you take your PC in to a local PC shop and see if they can install Windows for you.

 

They may have a notebook with an 8th gen core processor they can install Windows on your NVMe SSD and then plug the drive back into your PC and hopefully it will boot up and you can install the drivers afterward.

HP Recommended

Hello Paul, Thank you for your follow -up
Can consider an installation with a PC posing an I9 Intel processor of 12 th generation ... operating with Driver Irst ... and then resume and put the SSD in my HP 8 th generation ???

HP Recommended

Dear Paul,

You are certainly very helpful at times, and I thank you for your help. However, please be aware that I use Google Translate to translate my comments...

I am not using "REALTEK SD..." as you claim!
It's the architecture of my computer, manufactured and sold by HP, that is causing a false problem. Your engineers created this fault situation from scratch...

HP Spectre fault history:

1- The HP battery started to swell, to the point that it was deforming the mouse pad area, so I replaced the battery. However, the PC would no longer restart...
2- The motherboard had to be replaced for the PC to finally start working again. 3- About ten days later, a series of BLUE screens appeared and the crashes followed one after the other... I was able to reinstall several times... BUT the BLUE screen interruptions persisted, permanently locking the computer, which no longer logs into Windows...

So I tried to REINSTALL Windows 10 COMPLETELY.
And it doesn't work BECAUSE according to the current installation, done with RUFUS and a DOWNLOADED Windows 10 ISO...

Today my HP Spectre:
I managed to format my 512 GB SSD, so it's EMPTY!!!
I have an ISO, BUT IS IT THE RIGHT ONE? Because it seems that Microsoft is operating well-known malicious schemes... to trick you into downloading ISOs with their "MediaCreationTool" software, which creates malicious ISOs that don't respect customers and crashes programmed by themselves. So I installed an ISO using RUFUS on my USB, and when I started the installation process... to completely reinstall Windows 10, it blocked with an aberrant request for a so-called missing driver....

FAULT UNDER THE COMPLETE CONTROL OF HP:
It was therefore HP engineers who programmed this architectural aberration to block customers who wanted to reinstall Windows 10, because ACER also does this, however, it plans and provides the correct drivers, even for old computers...

The drivers available on the HP website are not compatible with the computer I was sold, and this so-called failure reflects HP's desire to destroy my computer and, consequently, the trust I had until then.

Thank you.

† The opinions expressed above are the personal opinions of the authors, not of HP. By using this site, you accept the <a href="https://www8.hp.com/us/en/terms-of-use.html" class="udrlinesmall">Terms of Use</a> and <a href="/t5/custom/page/page-id/hp.rulespage" class="udrlinesmall"> Rules of Participation</a>.