Imagine my heartbreak when all was installed and my shiny new laptop delivered the same dagger to my heart….”Device Could Not Be opened” This was a last resort for sure… and one I sadly resigned to last week. I even had someone from a pro audio store suggest I get a new laptop as mine was 7 years old. It was doing my head in that the drivers were installed… and Windows agreed that they were installed and working properly.Īnd the UR44 operated ( allowed me to hear sounds generated by the computer) but just would not map in Cubase. After re-install, the properties now show it to be “Manufacturer: Yamaha Corporation” and it’s working now.Īfter 8 weeks of crying I have solved this and it could not have been simpler…Īnd its nothing that was even close to being mentioned at any point on any forums I have scoured late into the evenings. While I did find an entry for “Yamaha TF”, when I right-clicked on properties, it said the Manufacturer was Microsoft. It should be under the “Sound, video, and game controlers” section of the device manager. To back this theory, before I reinstalled the driver, I was snooping around the device manager looking for the Yamaha Steinberg driver. However, there was a Windows Update in the last week…which leads me to conclude that the Windows Update overrode the Steinberg driver somehow. So, this Nuendo had not been used in a week and only a few hours of one day in the last week was it used at all. For quick reference, here’s the page with the driver info: Yamaha Steinberg USB Driver Updates and Downloads | Steinbergįor me, Nuendo is installed on a church computer that is used once a week when we record our praise band (with social distancing of course). It is very quick and I was not required to unplug all the USB stuff as the installation manual instructs. The solution for me was to uninstall the old driver (from the Windows Settings - Apps program) and then re-install the same driver. After the device-specific driver is installed, Windows 10 will select that driver instead of the standard USB audio 2.0 driver when you first connect the device.I had this issue after using Nuendo for just 1 week. If the device is not yet connected, first install the device-specific driver, such as by using the appropriate installer. For more information about how to do this, see update drivers in Windows 10. If the device-specific driver is distributed through Windows Update, you can manually update the driver by using Device Manager. To resolve this issue, install update 4022716. To fix this issue, use one of the following methods. This issue also causes Windows 10 Version 1703 to postpone the search for other compatible drivers through Windows Update that typically occurs immediately after you install a new device. Therefore, the system assumes that a compatible, nongeneric driver is installed for the device even though the driver is generic. This issue occurs because the USB audio 2.0 driver (usbaudio2.sys) isn't classified as a generic driver in Windows 10 Version 1703. When you connect a USB audio device to a Windows 10 Version 1703-based computer the first time, the operating system detects the device but loads the standard USB audio 2.0 driver (usbaudio2.sys) instead of the specific device driver. This article helps to fix an issue in which Windows 10 doesn't install specific drivers for USB audio devices on the first connection.Īpplies to: Windows 10, version 1703 Original KB number: 4021854 Symptom
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