


Some users have reported an issue with the URL of the repository the installer adds to your system.To fix it see this AskUbuntu article. The installer does not support the Ubuntu Linux low-latency kernel nor does it provide binary drivers for the Intel GMA 3600 (bundled with Intel’s Atom N2600 and N2800 chipsets).ĭebian installers can be downloaded directly from the Intel Open Technology Centre website, linked below. Support changes aside there is little difference between 1.0.5 of the installation wizard and the version released in March. Intel “strongly encourages” users to make use of their tool on the latest supported releases. While the tool can still be used to install drivers on a deprecated release it won’t offer up the most recent graphics stack.Īccordingly, Ubuntu 13.04 (aka Raring Ringtail) moves from ‘deprecated’ status to ‘dropped’. In here, make sure that Notify me of a new version is set to For any new version. Those still sticking with the Saucy Salamander should be aware that Ubuntu 13.10 support has been deprecated as of this release. The tool aims to simplify both installation and updating of drivers for Intel’s graphics cards so that users are able to get the best performance out of their hardware and stay “up-to-date with the latest Intel Graphics Stack for Linux”.īut while Ubuntu 14.04 LTS 64-bit and 32-bit get the official nod, along with Fedora 20, the update sees support for earlier versions retired.

I don't see anything relevant in dmesg output.Intel’s handy GPU driver installer for Linux has been updated to support Ubuntu 14.04 LTS. I've tried suggestions online to use the latest kernel version (tried both 4.9.7 and 4.10-rc6 from ), updated graphics drivers from Oibaf's PPA, used Intel's Graphics Update Tool, and put magical incantations in Xorg conf files (including turning DRI off, which at least reduced the frequency of the flashing a little), but ultimately to no avail.

It seems others have been able to run Linux with the same processor, so I'm not sure what's different about my setup. Multiple memory corruption issues exist in the Intel Graphics Driver component due to improper validation of input. I'm fairly certain it's a driver issue because everything worked fine when I installed Windows, and also works in Ubuntu if I switch to the console (Ctrl-Alt-F1). My display flashes off regularly - about once every second if I use resolution 1920x1080, rendering it practically unusable, and once every 5-10 seconds with resolution 800圆00. I've been trying to get Ubuntu 16.10 working on my custom PC with Intel core i3-7100 (Kaby Lake), but can't get the graphics working properly.
