I am using BCI2000 with Biosemi AD converter.
On Windows XP, The 32 bit USB drivers provided on Biosemi's website work with BCI2000 (which has a component to interface with the MK2 ADC).
However I am not able to install the 32 bit driver on windows 7 64 bit. I followed the instructions given in the driver package.
The .ini "install" option does not work. For the manual option, the problem is that when I insert the USB cable, windows tries to look for a driver online via windows update. If I cancel the online update, there is no option to look for the driver locally. The driver then appears under "Other devices" in the device manager with an exclamation mark.
I then try "Update driver" and point Windows to the folder containing the .inf file. This results in windows finding the driver but it it is not installed successfully. It is unable to find some (unnamed) file needed.
Is anyone familiar with this issue. Would be grateful for any information.
Regards,
Sandeep.
Install 32 bit USB drivers on 64 bit windows 7.
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Re: Install 32 bit USB drivers on 64 bit windows 7.
Use the 64-bit driver from http://www.biosemi.com/download/USB%20d ... 064bit.zip
If BCI2000 is a 32-bit application (like LabVIEW), then you will probably have to use the 32-bit LabVIEW_DLL.dll as packed with ActiView acquisition software (http://www.biosemi.com/download/LatestA ... 1-Vari.zip). If BCI2000 is a 64 bit application, then you should use the 64-bit LabVIEW_DLL.dll as packed with the 64-bit driver.
Best regards, Coen (BioSemi)
If BCI2000 is a 32-bit application (like LabVIEW), then you will probably have to use the 32-bit LabVIEW_DLL.dll as packed with ActiView acquisition software (http://www.biosemi.com/download/LatestA ... 1-Vari.zip). If BCI2000 is a 64 bit application, then you should use the 64-bit LabVIEW_DLL.dll as packed with the 64-bit driver.
Best regards, Coen (BioSemi)
Re: Install 32 bit USB drivers on 64 bit windows 7.
Sandeep,
On a 64 bit system install the 64 bit drivers, even if your programs are 32 bits.
Paul
On a 64 bit system install the 64 bit drivers, even if your programs are 32 bits.
Paul
Re: Install 32 bit USB drivers on 64 bit windows 7.
Indeed I had originally installed the 64 bit USB drivers on Windows 7 since I wanted to check the signals with Actiview 7.01. However, the BCI2000 Biosemi module did not work with that driver (was not able to connect). I then replaced the labview_DLL.dll in the BCI2000 build with the Labview_DLL.dll file from the Actiview 7.01 folder and tried again. The result was still the same.
I posted a question on the BCI2000 forums:
[url]http://www.bci2000.org/phpbb/viewtopic.php?f=9&t=1285[\url]
One of the posters there apparently had the same issue and had succeeded using the 32 bit drivers on 64 bit windows 7.
Best Regards,
Sandeep
I posted a question on the BCI2000 forums:
[url]http://www.bci2000.org/phpbb/viewtopic.php?f=9&t=1285[\url]
One of the posters there apparently had the same issue and had succeeded using the 32 bit drivers on 64 bit windows 7.
Best Regards,
Sandeep
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Re: Install 32 bit USB drivers on 64 bit windows 7.
Does ActiView work ?
Best regards, Coen (BioSemi)
Best regards, Coen (BioSemi)
Re: Install 32 bit USB drivers on 64 bit windows 7.
Yes Actiview 7.01 works on the 64 bit Windows 7.
Best Regards,
Sandeep.
Best Regards,
Sandeep.
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Re: Install 32 bit USB drivers on 64 bit windows 7.
Strange, because a working ActiView proves that the driver installation, and communication between the driver and the 32-bit LabVIEW_DLL.dll are all OK. This suggest a problem in the communication between BCI2000 and the 32-bit LabVIEW_DLL.dll.
Did you test with the latest driver (http://www.biosemi.com/download/USB%20d ... 032bit.zip) on your 32-bit XP computer?
Are you using the same (32-bit) version of BCI2000 on the 32-bit XP and 64-bit W7 computers ?
Have the BCI200 developers tested themselves on 64-bit computers, and under windows 7 ?
Best regards, Coen (BioSemi)
Did you test with the latest driver (http://www.biosemi.com/download/USB%20d ... 032bit.zip) on your 32-bit XP computer?
Are you using the same (32-bit) version of BCI2000 on the 32-bit XP and 64-bit W7 computers ?
Have the BCI200 developers tested themselves on 64-bit computers, and under windows 7 ?
Best regards, Coen (BioSemi)
Re: Install 32 bit USB drivers on 64 bit windows 7.
OK, I did get the system working on windows 7 with the 64 bit drivers. I uninstalled the (improperly installed) 32 bit USB drivers and reinstalled the 64 bit USB drivers. I don't know why the 64 bit drivers did not work the first time.
Am quoting my post on the BCI2000 forum:
[Quote]
I finally got the windows 7 system to work.
I used the following:
* Uninstalled the 32 bit USB drivers and reinstalled the original 64 bit USB drivers from the Biosemi link [url=http://www.biosemi.com/download/USB%20d ... 064bit.zip]USB driver Windows (64bit)[/url]
* Replaced the LabView_DLL.dll file in the BCI2000 build with the LabView_DLL.dll from the Actiview 7.01 folder from [url]http://www.biosemi.com/download/LatestA ... 1-Vari.zip[/url]. This is a beta version for windows 7 64 bit.
I just connected electrodes A1, A2, CMS and DRL with gel and for the moment, just to check that there is some sort of signal. The other electrodes A3 - A16 are just plugged in with no gel.
There does appear to be some sort of signal if I use the "Auto-scale" option in the signal window, but it is at 200000 muV and very small. So I'm not sure if I'm getting any real signal. I see numbers with a variation of about 20 from A1 and A2 while the variation in A3 - A6 is of the order of just 1 or 2 units.
If I use any other scaling (10 - 3000 muV), I don't see any signal at all. So I don't follow what is going on. Shouldn't I be seeing some signal at very low voltages?
But at least the Biosemi2 module seems to be working. The question is what signals am I getting.
[/Quote]
Best Regards,
Sandeep.
Am quoting my post on the BCI2000 forum:
[Quote]
I finally got the windows 7 system to work.
I used the following:
* Uninstalled the 32 bit USB drivers and reinstalled the original 64 bit USB drivers from the Biosemi link [url=http://www.biosemi.com/download/USB%20d ... 064bit.zip]USB driver Windows (64bit)[/url]
* Replaced the LabView_DLL.dll file in the BCI2000 build with the LabView_DLL.dll from the Actiview 7.01 folder from [url]http://www.biosemi.com/download/LatestA ... 1-Vari.zip[/url]. This is a beta version for windows 7 64 bit.
I just connected electrodes A1, A2, CMS and DRL with gel and for the moment, just to check that there is some sort of signal. The other electrodes A3 - A16 are just plugged in with no gel.
There does appear to be some sort of signal if I use the "Auto-scale" option in the signal window, but it is at 200000 muV and very small. So I'm not sure if I'm getting any real signal. I see numbers with a variation of about 20 from A1 and A2 while the variation in A3 - A6 is of the order of just 1 or 2 units.
If I use any other scaling (10 - 3000 muV), I don't see any signal at all. So I don't follow what is going on. Shouldn't I be seeing some signal at very low voltages?
But at least the Biosemi2 module seems to be working. The question is what signals am I getting.
[/Quote]
Best Regards,
Sandeep.
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Re: Install 32 bit USB drivers on 64 bit windows 7.
Connect a signal generator via the "two bucket test" (see manual), and use ActiView as a reference for the displayed amplitudes. Consider that signals on the ActiView display are base-line corrected (DC offset removed), and usually filtered (select suitable LP and HP settings in the left sidebar).
Best regards, Coen (BioSemi)
Best regards, Coen (BioSemi)