(Don't contact TI Cares as they are absolutely no help) At this point, you should probably start a topic on this website explaining your problem. It will even make TI-Connect work after you've installed TiLP. If it doesn't work, you probably have something else going on since this basically removes all traces of TI-Connect. Experimental (though, unlikely to break anything): If you have previously installed TiLP, go to C:\Program Files\Common Files\LPG Shared\drivers\usb\ and delete anything with a. If you are on a 64 bit operating system, I've never had to delete the drivers, but they are: silvrlnk.sys and tiehdusb.sys.Ĩ. If you are on a 32 bit operating system go to C:\WINDOWS\System32\DRIVERS\ and delete libusb0.sys. Repeat 2-4 for any USB port you may have plugged your calculator into.ħ. Find your calculator on the Device Manager list, usually under LibUSB devicesĥ. Plug your calculator into a usb port that you know you've plugged it into before.ģ. Open Device Manager (Control Panel>System>Devices>Device Manager)Ģ. At any point during the following list you can stop to see if it works, just remember that you'll have to redo all of the previous steps if it doesn't work.ġ. ![]() If none of this works, then it's time to have some fun. On a side note, when it asks you to select a cable, if you are using usb, none of those are the correct choice, so you'll just have to wait for your calculator to show up. To solve this, send all your programs to your computer and send them back from biggest to smallest. If it does, but just barely enough, you might have run into the problem of the memory not being continuous.
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