Other thought: it could also have to do something with a device id or other things which can be found in the device manager for the onboard soundcard. This also wouldn't enable the Dolby feature for other soundcards, so it has to be a driver issue. Plus: the original post had a manual for the installation, and i can't imagine someone wrote in there how to change the BIOS of even every motherboard to add the marker. It installed the driver, but without the functionality of dolby, and the Realtek Control Panel has an Asus logo in it, so I think its an driver issue. I was able to install the audio driver for Gigabyte (I downloaded yours) on my Asus motherboard.
I think the Dolby software was installed after the new onboard driver was installed, so there could also be a marker inside this new onboard driver version, and this would be simpler to change. And this marker is exactly what I wanted to find out, I thought we could find the different markers inside the same Dolby-Audio-Driver version for different PC models and edit it.īut I can imagine that it could also be useful to see all registry keys of your onboard Realtek soundcard and the Dolby-Audio-Driver.