Find Drivers Through Hardware Id Acpi
- Posted in:Admin
- 08/05/18
- 88
Driver for HP m6-k010dx for ACPI HPQ6007 on. I am looking for a driver for the 'Unknown device' ACPI HPQ6007 on. That is a relatively new hardware ID and I. Anyone know what this hardware ID is for? I can't find a driver for it: ACPI DELLABC6 Googling shows mixed results, from keyboard Fn buttons to WLAN and Bluetooth cards. As far as I know, all drivers are installed. Nov 19, 2014 I need to write a driver for Embedded controller in WIN7. Hardware ID is 'PNP0C09' there is already Microsoft compliance ACPI driver.
Have you installed the chipset from the PC's (or mobo's on self-build) Support Downloads webpage? If so try running As a last resort I often get a hard to find driver from free Decline the cleaner when installing, uninstall after use. It may be bundled in one of the chipset drivers it finds needs updating. ____________________ Blue links are tutorials.

Read my replies online instead of in notification email as I may add and edit. Windows MVP 2010-2018 Top rated volunteer at Seven Forums for 6 years.
You’ll see information about Unknown Devices in. To open it on Windows 10, 8.1, or 8, right-click in the bottom-left corner of the screen or press Windows Key + X and select Device Manager.
On Windows 7, press Windows Key + R, type devmgmt.msc into the Run dialog, and press Enter. The Device Manager can also be accessed from the Control Panel or with a search from your Start menu or Start screen. You’ll find unknown devices and other non-functioning devices under Other devices. Each device with a problem has a little yellow exclamation mark over its icon. Such devices will often have the name “Unknown device,” but they’ll sometimes have a more descriptive name. Hp 6730b Fingerprint Sensor Driver Windows 8.
For our purposes, the difference doesn’t matter. Although we may be able to see a name for the device, Windows doesn’t know what it is and we don’t know specifically which drivers we need for it. Find the Unknown Device’s Hardware IDs Now let’s identify the device. Right-click the unknown device and select Properties to view more information. Windows will inform you it doesn’t have the appropriate drivers — that’s error code 28.
Click the Details tab, click the Property box, and select Hardware Ids in the list. Windows displays a lot of other information about the device here, but the Hardware Ids will help you identify the device. You’ll usually see a list of long strings of characters here.
Just looking at them won’t tell you much, but they’re actually unique hardware IDs that correspond to the hardware. Perform a web search for the hardware ID using your favorite search engine. You should find the name of the piece of hardware associated with the unknown device, and that will give you the information you need to hunt down the driver. Here, we can see that the device is a Nexus 4 or Nexus 7 (2013) with USB Debugging enabled, so we’d need to. Windows will then recognize the ADB interface and the device will be a properly installed, “known device.” Install the Driver You can now hunt down the driver for the hardware device and install it normally.
You shouldn’t have to mess with the Device Manager here — just install the driver using the standard installer and it should work. If you have to manually install a driver for the device — perhaps the driver is already installed on your system — you can use the Update Driver button in the device’s Properties window. If the device driver is already installed on your system, click the “Browse my computer for driver software” link and choose an installed driver. Automatically Identify Devices and Install Drivers. Searching for appropriate drivers and downloading them from Windows Update. Windows wants to identify hardware and install drivers so you don’t have to do this.
If you’ve disabled this feature, you might encounter more unknown devices. To check whether this feature is enabled or disabled, open the Control Panel and click View devices and printers under Hardware and Sound. Right-click the device that represents your computer itself and select Device installation settings.
Ensure “Yes, do this automatically (recommended)” or at least “Always install the best driver software from Windows Update” is selected. These are the default settings, and allow Windows to download drivers and automatically configure new hardware. After enabling this setting, click the Update Driver button in a device’s properties window in Device Manager. You’ll be able to search for drivers from Windows Update — this should happen automatically after you connect the device to the PC, but you may want to try it again if you’ve just re-enabled the feature. Windows Update doesn’t have every driver for every device ever created. You’ll sometimes have to hunt the driver down on your own. Unknown devices are often a problem after.