• Reviews around driver (3.83 of 5)

    TP-Link Gigabit Ethernet PCI-Express Network Adapter (TG-3468)

    • Have the driver disc ready and from 'Device Manager' select 'Network Adapter', right click the (new) device and select "Update Device Software".
    • Came with a disc installed the hardware then the drivers, has been working like a charm since then
    • There are no compatible drivers for this device
    • Works great, no drivers needed to be downloaded for Windows 8.1.
    • Installed with no drama at all, drivers worked perfectly.
    • Installed card, installed drivers from disk, works instantly no problems
    • There are no drivers available for Windows 10.
    • this tp-link is great, plug and play, no driver install and ready to go... using powerline networking to avoid cancer causing EMFs from wifi and we rolling like that Drake song...
    • I installed the driver and the card works great
    • Just a tip - Windows 8 has a functional driver for this, but I recommend using the manufacturer's disk so you don't end up with two identical network adapters in Windows, which can be confusing.
    • but I may not have had the right driver.
    • On windows 7 I had to install the driver from the disk and works great
    • Easy installation, good drivers
    • You should download the proper driver from Realtek, who actually make the chip on this card.
    • Shut down computer, unplug, ground yourself, install card, start computer and Windows will install the proper drivers
    • It did take a couple of tries to install included drivers to XP but now working fine.
    • Windows 7 said a driver was unavailable.
    • The driver simply was unstable and I couldn't get an update that was Windows 10
    • Installed the drivers & Win 7 "saw" the device and put it to work right away.
    • It literally worked right out of the box with no need for driver installation (although a driver disk is included in case your computer doesn't automatically install the correct driver)
    • It requires special drivers so it does not work with anything other than Windows (unless you are going to write your own drivers for linux).
    • It does work after finding a compatible driver, but don't expect gigabit speeds
    • Check well to install the right driver
    • Plugged this in, rebooted, Windows already had a driver for it and everything worked perfectly without any setup
    • For other manufactures the settings are found in the device manager with the proper drivers installed
    • Does not provide proper drivers on installation disc
    • so you can select the correct driver from the CD.The
    • say to stop the auto plug and play installation where windows goes on the internet searching for the correct driver and follow their instructions to install the correct drive from the CD.
    • You let Windows install the default driver, then manually update that driver via Device Manager, navigating to and selecting the correct driver on the included mini CD.
    • Works great, driver was found by Windows and also works in OpenMediaVault/Debian.
    • Works great, driver was found by Windows and also works in OpenMediaVault/Debian.
    • Driver issues!!!!!!
    • Minus one star for awkward driver installation.
    • This one worked right away, driver is many years old but worked fine for Windows 7.
    • I found that there are critical steps that one must follow for successful driver installation.
    • This one worked right away, driver is many years old but worked fine for Windows 7.
    • Did not work with Win7 Pro, but the enclosed CD had the necessary drivers and now it works with both
    • No driver to install, it's invisible.
    • but then I was easily able to find and install the correct driver package and have not had any further issues.
    • --I never trust the 5-year-old drivers that are included on the disk in the package.
    • No problems installing drivers with Windows 7 64bit
    • Bad driver?
    • the drivers that were for windows 7 64bit did not work
    • It was mis-identified as a D-link device and attempted to install the wrong drivers
    • Manufacturer doesn't make drivers for Windows 10, and Windows 8 drivers don't work
    • Because of the registry hack, Windows complained that it couldn't install the hardware but the driver install worked.
    • No need to use the CD, Windows will install the correct driver on it's own and it's working great!
    • Easily obtainable drivers, installation, and functionality.
    • The drivers on the CD were no good and the downloading them from the internet was of no help
    • The drivers aren't compatible with windows 10, making it useless to me.
    • Win10 loaded correct drivers.
    • I rolled back the drivers and it would work but would only do up to 100mbs but previously was getting 350+mbs
    • Works fine, but didn't resolve my problem with a missing Fedora 23 driver
    • Disabled the onboard adapter, shut down the computer, installed hardware then the driver and it works great on an old Intel D945 series motherboard that I built for WindowsXP.
    • A++ super easy to install :D
    • I liked that it worked.
    • Just worked as soon as I powered it up.
    • Long PCI-E slots are backwards compatible with shorter ones, so this card should fit comfortably in any PCI-E slot just fine