

Search for Legacy Support (Your BIOS might not support that option) If you do find yourself having USB 3.0 ports, and you have the same issue as me or you could try the solution below. I guess this switching from 3.0 to 2.0 versions and back has something to do with energy saving, especially on laptops. This explains why sometimes it did work, and most other times it didn't. After some unplugging and re-plugging the devices the laptop seems to activate the 3.0 version of the USB ports. It turns out, my laptop was running all the USB 3.0 ports as 2.0 ports, this was also apparent from USB tree viewer.

Alternatively, you can either check that in Device Manager, or with the USB tree viewer. However, for me, activating the 3.0 version of those ports does enable me to utilize both video sources at the same time.Ĭheck if you have USB 3.0 ports on your computer by simply checking if the port has a blue color instead of a white one. And maybe that goes for 3.0 ports too if you're using high quality devices that use up a lot of power. But more a USB port version issue.Īs states, you can't use two video sources on 2.0 ports as both video sources will utilize too much bandwidth.
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After some research I found out that this is not necessarily a driver issue or a device issue.
