So I bought an ASUS A17 TUF laptop which said it was supposed to come with the Nvidia RTX 3060 card in it, yet in the display adapters section of the device manager it only lists AMD Radeon (TM) graphics, so I'm confused by that first and foremost..
What I'm having an issue with is my HDMI port for the purposes of connecting an external monitor and extending my desktop..
I have one external monitor connected via USB C and that one works fine and I've been told that the specs on this laptop only apparently allow one external monitor via a USB C port, so for my 2nd external display I thought I would use the HDMI port, yet when I connect it there nothing happens, the monitor doesn't even attempt to power cycle, it doesn't even give a "no signal" message, the power light doesn't even light up, it's like it's not connecting to the system at all.
I was told to go into the BIOS under advanced settings to enable the multiple monitor setup, but when I went in there I didn't see any option anywhere referencing that..
Does anyone have any suggestions here?
Also, I couldn't seem to find AMD Radeon (TM) graphics anywhere on any of the drop down lists on the AMD Drivers and Support page here - AMD Drivers and Support | AMD
The graphics driver/software will be in the 'Processors with graphics' section, look for your processor model.
You might want to ask on asus support forum for the multi monitor issue.
Hey! Thanks for stopping by! Laptops are special, and they use a type of technology that allows it to use both your laptop APU with your discrete graphics card. So in a sense, you have AMD Radeon Graphics built into your CPU AND you have NVidia's graphics card as well. Your system will choose which to run based off of the type of program it is. I would contact ASUS through the pre installed MyASUS app. They have decent help topics and support.
I needed to google the laptop model and the Nvidia GPU card that you mentioned it has installed.
I saw the specs that it uses a Ryzen 7 6800H APU processor with various Nvidia RTX 3050/3060/3070 GPU cards: https://www.asus.com/laptops/for-gaming/tuf-gaming/asus-tuf-gaming-a17-2022/techspec/
Under the laptop various models they all seem to have the same Graphics driver for Nvidia but none for the AMD APU Integrated Graphics: https://www.asus.com/laptops/for-gaming/tuf-gaming/asus-tuf-gaming-a17-2022/helpdesk_download/
I would download the Nvidia Graphics driver and Nvidia Control Panel and install that so that your RTX3060 will be enabled. In Device Manager under "Display" it should show two GPUs, AMD IGPU and Nvidia DGPU.
But it seems like Asus only has a AMD CONTROL PANEL but doesn't install a AMD Driver for the APU's Integrated Graphics. But does install a Nvida Graphics driver for your RTX3060.
It seems like if you install both AMD and Nvidia Graphics drivers in the same laptop there will be a conflict between each of the drivers. Maybe that is why the laptop driver download page only has a AMD Control Panel to install and not any AMD Graphics driver but only Nvidia Graphics driver for your more powerful RTX3060 DGPU card.
So I would use DDU to remove all AMD Driver and Control panel first and then download Asus OEM AMD CONTROL PANEL and install that.
Then I would use DDU again to remove any Nvidia driver and Control Panel and then download and install Asus OEM Nvidia Control Panel and Graphics Driver.
Afterwards I would go back to Device Manager and make sure under "Display" your Nvidia GPU is showing without any errors. Also it might show the AMD IGPU which Device Manager might have installed just the driver by itself.
If both are showing and there are no errors in Device Manager now see if you can hook up 2 Monitors without issue.
Some laptops does have a limit to how many Displays it can connect to. Generally 2 displays is the minimum for most laptops.
EDIT: Here is AMD APU Integrated Graphics driver from AMD Download page: https://www.amd.com/en/support/apu/amd-ryzen-processors/amd-ryzen-7-mobile-processors-radeon-graphic...
But I wouldn't install this driver because it might cause a conflict with your Nvidia Graphic driver. IF you do try to install it make sure to either make a Windows Restore point or better yet do a Windows System Backup in case your laptop is messed up.
If it is messed up and it won't boot into Windows restart the Laptop 3 times in a row before Windows loads up and it should go to automatic Windows Repair mode and then to Windows Troubleshoot Menu where you can click repair Windows Startup.
Super helpful reply, really appreciate it.
I'm going to have to digest it a bit and do some trial and error with a few things, but I will more than likely have another question or two if you don't mind.
I am currently downloading the Nvidia graphics from tmy laptop's driver and tools page that you provided (again, much thanks - also to the other two who replied as well).