Please upload drivers for Elephone S7 4G 64GB/4GB . I need drivres for Windows XP SP3. Search in Google,but not find.
no drivers
I had the same problem on windows 10
What you need to do is change or update the driver that Windows is currently using whenever your plug your Android device into the computer via USB. To do this, open the Device Manager by clicking the Start menu and searching for “Device Manager.”
Look for a device that has the “ADB” designation. .” Expand the group by clicking the little arrow on the left, then right-click on the device and select “Update Driver Software” from the context menu.
right click on phone and pick ' let me pick from a list of device drivers on this computer
If you don’t see anything with “ADB” in the name, you may have to look elsewhere. I found it under “Portable Devices,” and it had the yellow exclamation mark that notes there’s a driver issue. Regardless of where you find the device, the required actions should be about the same.
The “Update Driver Software” window will ask you if you search or browse for driver software. You want to choose the browse option, which will advance you to the next step.
On the next screen, select “Let me pick from a list of device drivers on my computer” to advance to the next step.
This will present a long list of potential hardware types–select “Android Device” or “Android Phone.”
Finally, on the last screen you want to select the “MTP USB Device” NOT MTP device and then “Next.”
The device driver will then install over the old one, and your Android device will be recognized as a multimedia device as seen now in the File Manager.
It helped me to install the S7
i have same problem, windows 8.1, please send drivers to conect to pc
thank you
there are no drivers
What you need to do is change or update the driver that Windows is currently using whenever your plug your Android device into the computer via USB. To do this, open the Device Manager by clicking the Start menu and searching for “Device Manager.”
Look for a device that has the “ADB” designation. .” Expand the group by clicking the little arrow on the left, then right-click on the device and select “Update Driver Software” from the context menu.
right click on phone and pick ' let me pick from a list of device drivers on this computer
If you don’t see anything with “ADB” in the name, you may have to look elsewhere. I found it under “Portable Devices,” and it had the yellow exclamation mark that notes there’s a driver issue. Regardless of where you find the device, the required actions should be about the same.
The “Update Driver Software” window will ask you if you search or browse for driver software. You want to choose the browse option, which will advance you to the next step.
On the next screen, select “Let me pick from a list of device drivers on my computer” to advance to the next step.
This will present a long list of potential hardware types–select “Android Device” or “Android Phone.”
Finally, on the last screen you want to select the “MTP USB Device” NOT MTP device and then “Next.”
The device driver will then install over the old one, and your Android device will be recognized as a multimedia device as seen now in the File Manager.
It helped me to install the S7
jon feaver said:
What you need to do is change or update the driver that Windows is currently using whenever your plug your Android device into the computer via USB. To do this, open the Device Manager by clicking the Start menu and searching for “Device Manager.”
Look for a device that has the “ADB” designation. .” Expand the group by clicking the little arrow on the left, then right-click on the device and select “Update Driver Software” from the context menu.
right click on phone and pick ' let me pick from a list of device drivers on this computer
If you don’t see anything with “ADB” in the name, you may have to look elsewhere. I found it under “Portable Devices,” and it had the yellow exclamation mark that notes there’s a driver issue. Regardless of where you find the device, the required actions should be about the same.
The “Update Driver Software” window will ask you if you search or browse for driver software. You want to choose the browse option, which will advance you to the next step.
On the next screen, select “Let me pick from a list of device drivers on my computer” to advance to the next step.
This will present a long list of potential hardware types–select “Android Device” or “Android Phone.”
Finally, on the last screen you want to select the “MTP USB Device” NOT MTP device and then “Next.”
The device driver will then install over the old one, and your Android device will be recognized as a multimedia device as seen now in the File Manager.
It helped me to install the S7
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Work Ok in Windows 7 Professional 64 Bits.
Thank. :good::good::good:
easy to find.. wind 8.1 and 10 have a very bad driver compatibility... i0ts an OS failure
http://www.drivethelife.com/windows-10/fix-mtp-usb-device-connection-problem-on-windows-10.html
I have the same problem with the drivers of elephone s7.after searching to the web I found a solution that works for me (I have an windows 10 laptop). After trying to update drivers I have an error message. Windows can't find INF folder. And that's the solution.
I hope I help..
Related
3. INSTALL DRIVERS (Windows only)
Your Windows PC will show a notification that a device “APX” has been detected. If you get a
“Found new hardware” dialog box asking where to install drivers from - choose “list or specific
location”. If you don't get this dialog, open the Device Manager via System in the Control
Panel, find and double-click the “APX” device, and click the update driver button.
Select the “usbpcdriver” folder inside the extracted Adam Recovery Kit as the driver location.
You may receive a warning that the driver is not certified or signed by Windows – choose to
install it anyway.
I'm trying to install the new update, but when i get to this portion of the instructions, I cannot for the life of me get the computer on Windows XP to recognize my device as a APX file. It's not even an option in the control panel in add new hardware. The computer keeps trying to recognize it as nvida harmony device
i saw this webpage about it and it directed me to a nvida webpage and i have absolutely no idea which one to install or whatso...
http://androidforums.com/gtablet-support-troubleshooting/253801-nv-flash-full-factory-reset.html
help :X!
Not sure if this will help, but here is some info on recovering Adam. It mentions APX...
http://www.notioninkhacks.com/forum...px&sid=91f02de37f2a51935594d9a48f299488#p2278
Also check out the GTAB forums, as the problems will probably be similar. I think Windows 64-bit and APX drivers may not play nice, for example.
NVM....i read the stupid instructions wrong. it's power button and VOLUME DOWN ........grrrrrrrrrr
1. Connect your Android-powered device to your computer's USB port. Windows will detect the device and launch the Found New Hardware wizard.
2. Select Locate and install driver software.
3. Select Don't search online.
4. Select I don't have the disk. Show me other options.
5. Select Browse my computer for driver software.
6. Click Browse and locate the USB driver folder. (The Google USB Driver is located in <sdk>\extras\google\usb_driver\.) As long as you specified the exact location of the installation package, you may leave Include subfolders checked or unchecked—it doesn't matter.
7. Click Next. Vista may prompt you to confirm the privilege elevation required for driver installation. Confirm it.
8. When Vista asks if you'd like to install the Google ADB Interface device, click Install to install the driver.
Or, to upgrade an existing Android USB driver on Windows Vista with the new driver:
1. Connect your Android-powered device to your computer's USB port.
2. Right-click on Computer from your desktop or Windows Explorer, and select Manage.
3. Select Device Manager in the left pane.
4. Locate and expand ADB Interface in the right pane.
5. Right-click on HTC Dream Composite ADB Interface, and select Update Driver Software.
6. When Vista starts updating the driver, a prompt will ask how you want to search for the driver software. Select Browse my computer for driver software.
7. Click Browse and locate the USB driver folder. (The Google USB Driver is located in <sdk>\extras\google\usb_driver\.) As long as you specified the exact location of the installation package, you may leave Include subfolders checked or unchecked—it doesn't matter.
8. Click Next. Vista might prompt you to confirm the privilege elevation required for driver installation. Confirm it.
9. When Vista asks if you'd like to install the Google ADB Interface device, click Install to upgrade the driver.
After many hours googling and searching here, I have finally successfully rooted my new Verizon Galaxy S4 (SGH-i545), and it had nothing to do with the root process itself, but it was the basic setup that was giving me fits.
Googling and searching has shown that this is actually a common enough problem with some Samsung devices, and there is a fix for it. Since I had to combine several different processes, I thought I would add a note here on how to get the device connected. I will leave the rooting and other discussions to the others. I am also going to give credit to arpruss, most of the steps here come from his work on the Epic. I have trimmed down to only what is necessary to get ADB working properly.
This assumes that you have already tried the various processes to install or update drivers, and that has not worked. Also assumes mid- to advanced user skills:
1. Install KIES. (Downloading the separate driver package didn't work--the driver package refused to install.)
2. Set device in USB Debug mode (Settings | Applications | Development | USB debugging(x)).
3. Plug device into computer.
4. Run Device Manager
5. Look for SAMSUNG_Android. You shoud see it in the Other devices section.
6. Right-click on "SAMSUNG_Android".
7. Choose "Update driver software" | "Browse my computer for driver software" | "Let me pick from a list".
8. Make sure "Show All Devices" is selected and click on "Next".
9. Click on "Have Disk" and type in "C:\Program Files (x86)\Samsung\USB Drivers\25_escape" (auto complete made it easier to type; if you have 32-bit windows, the " (x86)" should be omitted).
10. You will get a two-pane selection of the drivers. Selecting one of the two "SAMSUNG Electronics Co., Ltd." listings (you may need to look through both) in the left pane gives an option list on the right that includes two "SAMSUNG Android ADB Interface".
11. Choose the first "SAMSUNG Android ADB Interface" and click on "Next". You will get a warning that Windows cannot verify compatibility. Accept this. Windows will install the driver and once it's done you'll click on "Close".
12. Windows installed the driver and ADB started working. (If it didn't start working, I would now have gone back to the Device Manager, right clicked on "SAMSUNG Android ADB Interface", and then redid steps 7-11, but this time with the other "SAMSUNG Android ADB Interface" driver.)
This is enough to get adb working. But it's still probably worth fixing the CDC Serial device.
13. Repeat steps 7-11 in the Device Manager with the "CDC Serial" device now, except that instead of the ADB driver you will look for and install "Samsung Mobile USB CDC Composite Device" in the right pane in steps 10-11.
If all goes well, you will get more spinning stuff in the task bar, and eventually Device Manager doesn't show any devices in "Other devices" with yellow triangles. But if things go for you like they did for me, you'll have "CDC Abstract Control Model (ACM) in "Other devices".
14. Repeat steps 7-9 in the Device Manager with the "CDC Abstract Control Model (ACM)" device now. (You may have some USB Modem options showing up in some places, but I ignored those, and did the same "Have Disk" move as before.)
15. I got a single-pane display showing only "SAMSUNG Mobile USB Modem". (Maybe you'll have two-pane display and you'll have to find it as in steps 10-11.) Select it and click "Next". I didn't get any warnings. Windows will install the driver and once it's done you'll click on "Close".
At this point, Device Manager showed all devices correctly functioning. And "adb shell" worked fine.
16. If you don't want KIES, just uninstall it, but make sure not to uninstall the drivers (the KIES uninstaller will ask).
Hello,
here is my guide to "how to fix the File Transfer Problem" which some people have got.
FIRST:
It's just a problem with windows and not with your smartphone or custom rom.
This guide is for Windows 10, because i haven't installed another windows system anymore.. But with a few differences you should are able to follow this guide with windows 7, 8 or 8.1, too.
GUIDE:
Open a explorer windows and type "Control Panel" in it. You should be redirected to the old Windows 7 style control panel.
Click at "Hardware and Sound" and then at "Device Manager".
If your smartphone is plugged in your PC and you have chosen the File Transfer settings at the smartphones menu, in the device manager should be a unknown device with the name "MTP". (If this device doesn't be there, you should look for your phone at the other register entries and right click on it. Then choose uninstall and check the checkbox "delete drivers" (or similar..). In the device manager window click on the first entry with your PC name. After that click on "Action" in the menu and "Search for changed hardware". Then normally follow this guide.)
Right click on it and choose "update driver".
In the following window choose the second option, and then again the option at the bottom.
In this list search for the "Portable Devices" entry. Double-Click on it.
Now you should select standard MTP-device on the left side of the window (Important:Don't choose standard MTP-supported device or standard MTP-compatible device!)
On the right side you choose MTP-Device. Click on next and confirm the message of "incompatible driver warning".
Then the driver should be installed and your device should be recognised normally by the windows OS.
That's it!
Greetings,
AenimaEx
It worked, I just had to go to Portable Devices instead of Wearable Devices. For some reason the internal storage is showing up as 4 GB.
Okay, i've corrected it. Hmm.. How much storage capacity should it be? You could try to backup all files and folders from your sdcard to your PC and then format the sd card in your smartphone. Normally it should partition and format the sdcard with it's full size.
Thanks for the Guide. Works also for the old Samsung SGS4 i9505 on LineageOS 16 with Win 10.
I tried to flash my google glass EE2 via my laptop which is currently running windows 10. I have done the following steps:
1. Update the Google USB Driver from android studio sdk manager
2. Download the new image file and unzip it
3. Open windows powershell from inside unzip image folder.
4. Run adb devices (Show my google glass in list)
5. Then adb reboot-bootloader
6. Then turn off the device with physical button and restart with camera and power button until “Press volume key to select, and press the power key to accept.” screen shows up.
7. Then run fastboot devices (Here I stuck, No list of devices, no message nothing happens)
Note:- I updated the driver as well via these steps but still end with no success
1. Connect your Android device to your computer's USB port.
2. From Windows Explorer, open Computer Management.
3. In the Computer Management left pane, select Device Manager.
4. In the Device Manager right pane, locate and expand Portable Devices or Other Devices, depending on which one you see.
5. Right-click the name of the device you connected, and then select Update Driver Software.
6. In the Hardware Update wizard, select Browse my computer for driver software and click Next.
7. Click Let me pick from a list of available drivers on my computer
8. Click Next with Show all devices selected.
9. Click Have disk.
10. Click Browse and then locate the USB driver folder. For example, the Google USB Driver is located in android_sdk\extras\google\usb_driver\.
11. Select android_winsub.inf file and click Open.
12. Click Next to install the driver with Android ADB Interface selected.
13. Confirm the Update Driver Warning dialog.
14. Driver installed
Yeah...
It's funny enough that you created this thread because I am having the exact same issue right now too.
I tried on my laptop running Windows 10 and then on my desktop running Ubuntu. Absolutely zero luck with this. Please let me know if you can figure out a solution. With Powershell I was able to see adb devices but other than that fastboot seems broken to me on Glass.
Hard reset maybe? While on hold power button for 15 seconds, then release. wait a few seconds after that and then hold power button for a few seconds to turn back on.
Also you might try Installing the rooted bootloader.
And take a look at these 2 pages: https://support.google.com/glass/answer/9649198?hl=en
https://dl.google.com/android/repository/platform-tools_r30.0.1-windows.zip
I appreciate your response!
On Windows 10, fastboot devices just seemingly doesn't work at all and doesn't populate the glass hardware at all for me.
OscarDelphi said:
I appreciate your response!
On Windows 10, fastboot devices just seemingly doesn't work at all and doesn't populate the glass hardware at all for me.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I see others have had problems on Windows 10 using fastboot. Seems to be related to having a correct driver for your device. If you can't find one (check your device manager to see if it is recognizing Glass properly) you might have to find a Windows 7 computer to do this on.
droidzer1 said:
I see others have had problems on Windows 10 using fastboot. Seems to be related to having a correct driver for your device. If you can't find one (check your device manager to see if it is recognizing Glass properly) you might have to find a Windows 7 computer to do this on.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I even tried on Ubuntu with no luck just for curiosity's sake.
Device manager is showing me Unknown USB Device is attached.
OscarDelphi said:
I even tried on Ubuntu with no luck just for curiosity's sake.
Device manager is showing me Unknown USB Device is attached.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It makes me so happy to be able to follow up this post with how I found a solution. I am going to give a story first because this was beyond frustrating. The solution for me was to forget finding a solution in Windows 10 and just use an installation of Ubuntu. Holy crap this made the steps a lot easier.
However, even using the Terminal in Ubuntu it hung up twice while flashing system.img and I thought Glass was dead. Fortunately, fastboot was just being finicky and refusing to work. The solution to that was to have the command already ran and then reboot back into fastboot because this allowed the system to almost instantaneously realize the device was in fastboot and it immediately the flashed the files.
I hope this might point some light if anyone else ever comes across the issue!
Install Ubuntu
The easy way to do it, is install Ubuntu and install adb and fasstboot from terminal with comand "apt-get install 'your Tool...'"
yubarajoli77 said:
I tried to flash my google glass EE2 via my laptop which is currently running windows 10. I have done the following steps:
1. Update the Google USB Driver from android studio sdk manager
2. Download the new image file and unzip it
3. Open windows powershell from inside unzip image folder.
4. Run adb devices (Show my google glass in list)
5. Then adb reboot-bootloader
6. Then turn off the device with physical button and restart with camera and power button until “Press volume key to select, and press the power key to accept.” screen shows up.
7. Then run fastboot devices (Here I stuck, No list of devices, no message nothing happens)
Note:- I updated the driver as well via these steps but still end with no success
1. Connect your Android device to your computer's USB port.
2. From Windows Explorer, open Computer Management.
3. In the Computer Management left pane, select Device Manager.
4. In the Device Manager right pane, locate and expand Portable Devices or Other Devices, depending on which one you see.
5. Right-click the name of the device you connected, and then select Update Driver Software.
6. In the Hardware Update wizard, select Browse my computer for driver software and click Next.
7. Click Let me pick from a list of available drivers on my computer
8. Click Next with Show all devices selected.
9. Click Have disk.
10. Click Browse and then locate the USB driver folder. For example, the Google USB Driver is located in android_sdk\extras\google\usb_driver\.
11. Select android_winsub.inf file and click Open.
12. Click Next to install the driver with Android ADB Interface selected.
13. Confirm the Update Driver Warning dialog.
14. Driver installed
Click to expand...
Click to collapse