this is the first version of a hardware-near system check tool… issues in this context are not very unlikely and surely will improve with future releases of the CheckUp tool as well as SU itself.
You can try a manual installation of the latest intel driver mentioned above via the Windows Device Manager by right-clicking your intel HD and selecting “Update Driver Software… > Bowse my Computer… > path to the unzipped driver archive”.
If this won’t help and you are using a desktop and you don’t wanna shell out lot’s of bucks, buy a recent and decent GeForce GTX 1050Ti and your fine.
The same problem here… Windows 8.0 with Intel(R) HD Graphics 4600
SU 2017 won’t start - is crashing right at the beginning and
SU Checkup starts but is crashing half way through…
But only because you have two GPUs and are able to run SketchUp on the Nvidia graphics. This will not solve issues with integrated Intel graphics and machines that have no expansion slots.
Here is an update to my previous posts in this thread.
(Friday, Dec 2, 2016)
Dell Inspiron, i3 gen, 3.4 GHz, 8 GB ram, 850 GB free disk space, Intel 4400 graphics card.
About three weeks ago I posted several times while trying to upgrade to SU 2017. I could not get either the “SU Checkup” to finish nor SU 2017 to load. Frustrated, I gave up. Tonight (2:15 AM), I went to Dell, entered my computer code and found my current graphics driver was: 10.18.10.3412. I opted to update the driver which installed version: 10.18.14.4264. Rebooted computer, downloaded “SU Checkup” and this time all systems successfully passed. Then downloaded and Installed SU 2017 without a problem. Surprise!
In retrospect, I think I had previously gone to Intel’s site for drivers (15.36.26.4294 etc.), but the successful driver came from Dell, my computer manufacturer. Since the available drivers for the Intel 4400 graphics card are listed on both Intel and Dell’s web pages, I assumed the drivers were also be the same. Not so. Even the numbers are different. (See above)
Now I just have to manually customize the screen Icons, etc. And as far as importing SU 2016 preferences into SU 2017, under /WINDOWS/PREFERENCES… both the “FILES” and “SHORTCUTS” contents were automatically imported into SU 2017 during the installation. My choice of screen icons were not and possibly other preferences as well - not a big issue…
Thanks to all the posters under this topic and I hope my experience can be helpful to someone else.
Which I noted above has already been proven to have a bugged OpenGL library DLL.
Why are you surprised? Again, above (and in several related topic threads,) I clearly stated that the earliest version known to work is 10.18.10.4061. You’re now up above that, so now you can enjoy SketchUp 2017.
Yes, end users should always check with their computer manufacturer first. (I discussed this clearly above with my own issues updating two Toshiba notebooks, and how none of the basic driver packages from Intel would install.)
(Well, you know the old saying about making assumptions …)
Dell (and every other computer or graphics card manufacturer,) does not start from scratch with graphics driver code. They get the base code from the GPU manufacturers (Intel, AMD/ATI, Nvidia, Matrox, etc.)
Then the computer (or graphics card) manufacturer tweaks the driver code especially for their machines / cards, compile it, and sometimes package it with OEM configuration utilities. They often just keep the same build numbers as the GPU build. (Rhetorical: Why create confusion by using a different versioning system?)
Sometimes there is another level between these two parties, the motherboard manufacturer,… who’ll collect drivers from chip manufacturers, do some tweaking, and pass the tweaked code on to the computer manufacturer(s).
No problem. Yes. This topic should be easily found via forum search.
(1) You need to update your Intel graphics driver to 10.18.10.4061or higher.
[You currently have version 10.18.10.3355 which does not support SketchUp.]
(2) In addition, please download and install SketchUp 17.2:
If you have any other issues running SketchUp 2017, please see
this troubleshooting post by Ty from the SketchUp Team:
Other readers please first run the newest version (17.2 or higher) of SketchUp Checkup before looking for WER reports.
Get Checkup here: SketchUp Checkup | SketchUp Help
If you still cannot get SketchUp 17.2 (or higher) running and need to post a WER report, then …
Rename wer log files to “SketchUp2017.wer.txt” and attach to a post. PLEASE do not paste the entire file into posts!
Hey, thanks for your response, it seems that my graphic card is ASUS custom made, I’ve contacted ASUS and they said they don’t have any newer update for the driver, I guess I’ll have to buy a new graphic card.
@Moniorteg, Intel graphics would be soldered onto the MB or integrated into the CPU, so the chances for updating that computer’s graphic card may be greatly limited.
Try SU16. Not only are the OpenGL requirements less onerous, but if you graphics driver doesn’t fully supply the required OpenGL requirements, there’s an option to have the CPU do all the work.
Hello.
I just bought a used laptop. Samsung with an Intel 4000 graphic card.
The latest driver from Samsung is that 10.18.10.3355.
So I cant use Sketchup 2017.
Is there any way to swap the OpenGL driver file from a newer driver?
Or anything?
Or I need 1000 dollars to buy another laptop.
Thanks a lot.
Hello.
I found a fix for my Samsung laptop with Intel 4000 graphic card to run Sketchup 2017.
I installed the latest driver available from the manufacturer (Samsung). It was only available for download when using the latest Samsung Update application that can be downloaded from Samsung website. The version is: 10.8.10.3xxx
After this update Sketchup 2017 is already working but I loose the ability to adjust the screen brightness with the Fn buttons or any other way (Power Options in Control panel also not working). But there is this fix: Redirecting
You just use RegEdit as admin, edit that key, reboot and everything is OK!