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July 26, 2016 at 4:19 pm #44557
I had the same problem as Jade had: It took three times on my machine, too. After the first run the machine froze when showing the Teclast logo (after the firmware update). I shut it down after waiting for an hour or so by long holding the power button and restartet. I hit the restart button in the device manager showing the error (code 14). After the second time of flashing I realized that the 128 SD (=TF) card seems to work. Don’t know if that was already the case after the first flash. So I did the flash a third time to get rid of the “please-restart-code-14-thing”, just to be sure that I don’t run into troubles when working with the card. And indeed: The third time flashing removed the restart message in the device manager. Now everything seems to work fine.
July 3, 2016 at 6:17 am #42530I’m not 100% sure, but I think the keyboard in the picture was the first version of the official keyboard. I think there must have been some problems so it got replaced with a second version, which is the one you can order now . Unfortunately this new version does not have a real USB port.
May 20, 2016 at 4:55 pm #38040@O. C. No, not yet. I just checked the firmware-section on their homepage for my device id (E5A6) and then got an chinese text which – according to Google translator – means, that for this id no downloads could be found. So obviously at the moment there is no (new) firmware.
May 17, 2016 at 7:45 am #37650Hm, so the capacity of the card is not in every case the problem:
enrique has a Samsung Evo 64 GB, that works with both operating systems. iho.td2015 also has a 64 GB card, that doesn’t work with Windows – could you specify, what card exactly you’re using? My both SanDisk Ultra SDXC 64 GB and 128 GB do not work with Windows either.
Does by chance anyone have a Samsung Evo with 64 or 128 GB and could check, if that card model is working in Windows? Perhaps with larger cards Samsung works and Sandisk or others don’t? Just trying to figure out, what the problem is, that some cards work and some don’t.
May 15, 2016 at 2:06 pm #37414How exactly do you manage to get into the BIOS? Is it really via the ESC-Key? And when do you press it? I guess before the start menu appears?
May 15, 2016 at 9:11 am #37388Same problem with my 128 GB SanDisk Ultra microSDXC. And as O. C. discovered: A smaller card – in my case a 32 GB Transcend microSDHC – works perfectly fine in Windows. Not sure, if that’s the solution.
I also do not have any problems in Android with the 128 GB card, but I do in Windows.
The second part with the BIOS setting is a problem for me as I can’t enter the BIOS by pressing the ESC key (I tried every single second during startup. I’m using the TL-T11 keyboard/case.).
If we cannot figure out, how to permanently save that BIOS setting, is there a chance to narrow down, if the problem is based on the capacity or on the type (SDHC vs. SDXC) of the sd card? To start: Can anyone check, if 64 GB are working?
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