

Any thing to be offered here? Thanks for the advice. My question is, what am I doing wrong here? I mean this should not be this hard to install Windows 7 to a USB 3 based system with the Intel utility. Since everything is USB 3.0 native, there was no issues installing. Right now I have the NUC running on Windows 10. Created another USB booting drive and try the USB creator again. Click 'OK' on the next window, then click 'Close'. Click 'Unzip' and the files will extract. If it is an EXE file, double-click the file you downloaded and specify a location into which the driver files will be extracted. Next I download a minty fresh copy of the Windows 7 64 bit ISO from the microsoft website. To install from a Web download, you will download either a ZIP file or an EXE file from the Web. So I figured maybe it was something wrong with the ISO copy on the jump drive. Yes I was running this program on a Windows 10 laptop and with admin privileges. I would get to the last image, at which point it would stop working and give a message of the program needs to close. Intel USB 3.0 Device Driver for Windows 7 for Intel NUC lat. Long story short.ĭownloaded and ran the USB 3.0 Creator utility for the Windows 7 USB drive I have. Intel USB 3.0 Device Driver for Windows 7 for Intel NUC (Windows), free and safe download. ironically this is being typed on a W10 laptop) Here is what I have done so far. (I like the overall feeling of W7 over 10. Now i would prefer to have Windows 7 running on the NUC at this time. Once up and running to my liking, it will be replacing the Skylake i5 system I built earlier this year. Browser - Google Chrome 10+, Internet Explorer (IE)10.0+, and Firefox 3.6.x, 12.I recently purchased a NUC6i5 system.Browser - Google Chrome 10+, Internet Explorer (IE)10.0+, and Firefox 3.6.x, 12.0+.

Operating System - Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10.Remove "HP Support Solutions Framework" through Add/Remove programs on PC.

