I didn't know this was a forum. I didn't expect a reply. Anyway I did
figure that was why. Although I had another computer from the same era
with a NVIDIA card, and it still gets driver updates in Windows using
GeForce Experience. This one dual booting Linux and Windows however does
not even get NVIDIA driver updates for Windows anymore either though.

This is an old computer. I'm installing various Linux distros on it to
make sure their live installers can copy the GRUB .efi files to the
correct partition on an external USB HDD, before I try the same sort of
install with a more modern Intel laptop and my USB drive. I usually CSM
boot, but most PCs don't have CSM/Legacy mode anymore, therefore I am
having to use UEFI natively. There was a bug with Ubiquity. When
selected to install /mount/EFI to a FAT32 partition on a SSD or HDD
(such as my USB HDD) different to the main SSD on which Windows Boot
Manager is installed - so you can dual boot without modifying the
Windows EFI partition (avoid boot coups from either OS) - If you did
this, Ubiquity without asking or telling you would automatically install
GRUB to the EFI partition on the main drive's EFI partition, sharing it
with Windows Boot Manager, and possibly overwriting the fallback
/EFI/BOOT/bootx64.efi copy of BOOTMGR with Grub. This PC is old, and the
CMOS battery is out of power, so if that file gets overwritten it
wouldn't be possible to get back into Windows without changing the
battery or restoring the fallback copy of BOOTMGR somehow. Not that it
matters. But if the CMOS on any of my more modern laptops were to run
out for some reason I would have to boot windows using the install USB.
I was also concerned about the way native EFI would interact with the
firmware and NVRAM, I thought it might do something stupid like cause
all the variables to be cleared. I have another Lenovo laptop from the
same era. Apparently people have found if you install a Linux distro on
this in any way, the boot menu and novo button options are no longer
there afterwards. So I want to make sure my older computers work ok in
native EFI mode before running Linux that way on a more modern computer.

Anyway that's another problem. Kubuntu 24.10 uses Calamares I believe
which works fine. Not sure what 24.04 uses, is it Ubiquity or Subiquity?
And does it still have that problem? I want to know before I use the
live installer booted on my modern PCs.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/2089456

Title:
  no sound after installing nvidia 550 driver using synaptic

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