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My first attempt: remove it from Device Manager
#ASUS SONICMASTER WONT BOOT HOW TO#
(Perhaps you bought the machine not for that feature but for other features of the machine.)Īs I searched the web (and the Asus site) for any explanation of how to permanently disable it, I found various suggestions ( see below.) But none worked well for me, or didn't work permanently.Īnd when I first wrote this post, I shared my first attempted solution which I THOUGHT would be permanent. Perhaps like me you don't really need a numeric keyboard at all, and so you may prefer to just disable the Numberpad permanently. Trying to disable the Asus Numberpad "permanently"
#ASUS SONICMASTER WONT BOOT SOFTWARE#
The annoyance is that there doesn't seem any feature built-in to the hardware or any Asus software to disable the feature. But it gets annoying if you find it happening often. Granted, to turn it off, you just have to long-press the button. The problem is that it's very easy to brush that button to enable it. But some folks find the touchpad mouse movements to NOT be as good an experience as when this feature is DISABLED.Īgain, to disable the numberpad, you simply long-press the same image/virtual button, and the numberpad no longer appears. Note that even when the numpad is enabled, you can still use the touchpad for typical mouse movements and tapping, which is especially clever. When you enable it, the numeric keyboard lights up within the touchpad, which is helpful for those who need to do numerical data entry, etc. You simply tap the icon (a virtual button) on the top right of the touchpad to enable/disable the display of the Numberpad. It's designed so that you can use it when you want, and then disable it. You can learn more about it at the Asus web site FAQ on the feature. It's a "virtual" numeric keypad within your touchpad that can be enabled optionally with a button in the top right of the touchpad. (I have it on a ZenBook, but I've read of it existing on VivoBook, ExpertBook, StudioBook, and even ROG Strix and perhaps Tuf models-though I also have one each of those and they do NOT have it.) See the image provided here.
#ASUS SONICMASTER WONT BOOT FULL#
The feature is found on many modern Asus laptops whose keyboard lacks a full numeric keypad on the right.
Then I conclude with what has, for me (so far).įirst, let's talk about the NumPad feature itself, for context. TLDR See below for how to do that if you may prefer to cut to the chase, but interested readers may want to understand a few things first, like what I mean by the Numberpad feature, and the problem that may prompt folks to seek how to disable it, as well as other solutions that I found had been proposed (even before I wrote this post) but also did not work. Others later proposed various ways to try to remove it permanently, but those don't seem to work, either.
#ASUS SONICMASTER WONT BOOT DRIVER#
Removing the numberpad driver (NOT the touchpad's driver) from Windows Device Manager seemed at first the best way, but it proved to be temporary. In this post, I discuss ways to try to do it. At this point, all I care about is unlocking the OS on the 500GB HDD where Windows 8 is installed.)Īny ideas on how to fix this? Thanks in advance.Do you have a modern Asus laptop with the NumberPad (orNumPad) feature (a virtual numeric keypad embedded within the touchpad)? You may know there's a button to enable/disable it on demand, but do you find find it coming on when you brush that by mistake? Are you annoyed that you can't find how to "permanently" disable it? (On top of all this, the BIOS shows that a 24GB SSD is also installed in the PC. I attempted to (re)install the second boot option for the DVD drive as shown however it did not work. I have also tried to use an external CD/DVD drive - the BIOS won't recognize it, even with the USB security features disabled. In boot options, however, it only gives an option for booting from the hard drive (not just "c" or "hard drive", but a cryptic path to a specific boot registry entry).Īll administrator and user security options are unlocked or disabled in the BIOS. In the BIOS screen, the PC recognizes the existence of the internal CD/DVD drive. It appears that whoever installed Windows 8 wrecked havoc on the BIOS settings to the point that the F9 "Restore Optimized Defaults" option is useless,
#ASUS SONICMASTER WONT BOOT PASSWORD#
The customer has forgotten their password and I'm trying to use a CD with Pogostick PW Recovery to clear it. I'm working on an ASUS S56C Notebook PC running Windows 8.