On Feb 21, 1:28Â am, Summer1 wrote:
> My question was not directly answered.
>
> After installing software, I know that it is a good idea to check the
> manufacturer's website for 'newer' drivers.
>
> When clicking on a 'driver,' how will I know if I have the 'latest' one?
> Will it install regularly if I don't have the latest one and ask me if I
> want to 'override' if I do have the latest one?
>
>
>
> Â "Jose" wrote:
> > On Feb 19, 5:31 pm, Summer1 wrote:
> > > Afer installing software, I know that it is a good idea to check the
> > > msnufacturer's website for 'newer' drivers.
>
> > > When clicking on a 'driver,' how will I know if I have the 'latest' one?
> > > Will it install regularly if it I don't have the latest one and ask me if I
> > > want to 'override' if I do have the latest one?
>
> > > Not all manufacturer website have a link to 'automatically check for latest
> > > drivers.'
>
> > Don't expect to be somehow notified if your installed driver is not
> > the latest one from the manufacturers WWW site. Â You should figure it
> > out and rely on yourself.
>
> > Don't rely on any online driver scanning wizardry to automatically
> > check your system for the latest drivers and scan all your system
> > drivers and give you a report. Â They will surely find things "wrong"
> > to lure you into paying $$$ for them to fix what might not need
> > fixing.
>
> > Automatically check for latest drivers from a manufacturers WWW site?
> > Where do you see that? Â That is not how the manufacturers do things.
> > That is how scammers do things. Â Scan, they find 10 drivers out of
> > date with lots of !!!! and want $$$ to "fix" your system and you
> > didn't even know it was broken. Â Some people fall for that gloom and
> > doom scheme, but you are too smart for that, right?
>
> > I would say to only check for and install new drivers when you have a
> > problem that is solved by the new drivers, on a brand new installation
> > of Windows or perhaps curiosity. Â Video, audio, network are popular
> > drivers that get updated. Â The drivers that come with Windows may be
> > fine for your system. Â I see sometimes where there are later drivers
> > for some things, but it doesn't mean you need to install them.
>
> > If you think you have a problem with a driver, say what driver (video,
> > audio, network) and we can tell you how to check to see what it is and
> > where to get look for updates.
>
> > You might see a new problem with a driver update, so you need to
> > understand how rolling back a driver update works too.
> > .
You can determine your device drivers using Device Manager.
You can get into Device Manger with this shortcut:
Click Start, Run and in the box enter:
%SystemRoot%\system32\devmgmt.msc
Click OK
Expand the section containing the device of interest and right click
the device, Properties, Driver tab, and find out
what you have, then go to the manufacturers WWW site and find out if
there is a later version.
Just because there might be a later version doesn't mean you have to
install it, if things are working okay and nothing is listed for your
unspecified issue, you may want to just keep the driver you have.
If things get worse with the new driver, use the Roll Back Driver
button to reinstall the old driver.
Always reboot after making driver changes.