Optimizing Legacy Hardware: The Intel Eaglelake Graphics Driver for Windows 10 (64-bit) 1. Introduction
Intel does not provide official "Production" drivers specifically for the Eaglelake family on Windows 10. Official support generally begins with 4th Generation Intel Core processors (Haswell) or newer.
Check "Run this program in compatibility mode for" and select Run as Administrator: Right-click the file again and select Run as Administrator to begin the installation. Manual INF Install (If Setup Fails): Extract the driver files using a tool like 7-Zip. Device Manager , right-click your display adapter, and select Update driver "Browse my computer for drivers" and point to the folder containing the Expected "Extra Quality" Performance Check "Run this program in compatibility mode for"
Since these chips are ancient by modern standards, "extra quality" is relative. Installing the legacy driver instead of the Microsoft Basic driver allows for: Aero Effects:
Third-Party Tools: Utilizing the Intel Driver & Support Assistant (DSA) can occasionally identify compatible generic drivers that Windows Update misses. 5. Conclusion Installing the legacy driver instead of the Microsoft
While Intel does not offer a dedicated Windows 10 package, the Windows 7 or Windows 8 64-bit drivers are often compatible and provide full hardware acceleration.
Caution: Avoid “beta” or “OEM-custom” drivers from motherboard vendor websites (ASUS, MSI, Gigabyte) unless they explicitly list a fix for your issue. They are often months out of date. Intel’s generic driver is superior. right-click your display adapter
Key Features of Intel Realsense Lakeridge Graphics Chip
If you still want hardware acceleration on Windows 10 64‑bit with an Eaglelake GPU: