Under Windows Update, select Check for updates. Windows Update will tell you if you need any updates or not, and whether the latest updates were successfully installed. 


There might not be any driver updates available.

The Microsoft Mouse and Keyboard Center is an app that helps you make the most out of your Microsoft keyboard and mouse. Mouse and Keyboard Center helps you personalize and customize how you work on your PC.


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I have Windows 11, current on Windows updates AND drivers,updates from my manufacturer(Lenovo). Generally speaking, everything works fine except for 1 significant thing that is pretty annoying. Whenever I lock the desktop(Win-L) and get up for a few minutes, when I return to the pc and log back in, the mouse pointer is almost invariably missing and I have to reboot to get it back(usually by ctrl-Alt-Del to the black screen(or whatever it's called) and then using the key to get down to the power icon and selecting it, then rebooting.

***The ONLY thing I've ever dound to help this is to turn off ALL customization options for the mouse pointer(like size, color(black), trails(which are helpful for locating the mouse pointer - now I have to use the Ctrl key to find it), and that seems to be working(for the past few days), but I really do miss being able to use the pointer trails, larger mouse cursor, etc., as I'm permanently disabled from strokes and my vision gets tired out as the day wears on.

If you don't have the latest graphics drivers installed (WHQL) from the OEM or vendor, things like drop shadows for icon labels on the desktop will not work properly (most animations and visual effects depend on the shader cache.) The mouse pointer / trackpad / peripheral device could be in a low power state, but it's probably just related to your graphics drivers. It's hard to say. You could try this even:

Control Panel -> Device Manager -> Mice and other pointing devices -> Select the device (mouse / trackpad, etc.) -> Right Click -> Properties -> Power Management -> Uncheck: Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power

@Mousefluff, I just went and manually 'updated' the driver to the latest one on Lenovo's website for my pc, then went into device manager after rebooting to verify it is indeed using that new driver. I'll see how it does for a few days and post back later this week with the results...

Reassign any button on your mouse to perform virtually any task. For advanced devices, you can adjust the scroll wheel, cursor speed, and much moreMouse button customization available on Windows and macOS, F-key customization available on Windows only.. Enhanced key functions let you set Logitech keyboards to behave just the way you like.

Enable the gesture button to reproduce trackpad gestures you're already familiar with. Hold the gesture button and move the mouse up, down, left or right to activate different actions such as Windows Task View or Mission Control on the Mac. Control your media playback, pan, zoom, and rotate too.

Recently I bought a Bluetooth mouse and now I have troubles with connecting it to my Windows 7 32bit. I have tried Control Panel -> Devices and Printers -> Add Device but no device was found. I also tried Add Bluetooth Device button but with the same effect.

First, it perfectly connected and worked on Ubuntu 14 so everything is fine with hardware. I can see Bluetooth module in device manager (along with Microsoft Bluetooth Enumerator) without exclamation mark so I think drivers are fine. My Bluetooth support service is enabled and working. I've pressed turn on Bluetooth button on my laptop. I've ticked allow Bluetooth devices to connect in Bluetooth options. I also tried to set system account on LOG tab of Bluetooth support service properties - no effect.

Then I pressed disable adapter in Bluetooth settings and somehow it found all my Bluetooth devices I don't know what happened, but my mouse worked for a short period. Then my PC told me that it needs to reboot. After reboooting the mouse didn't work. Again. I opened Bluetooth devices I tried to remove and add mouse again but it said that it failed to install Bluetooth HID device driver. But at least it saw my Bluetooth devices in that moment. Then I decided to update the Bluetooth drivers, rebooted and now I see nothing. Again.

If you check the Microsoft Designer Bluetooth mouse's specification, you will notice that it does not work with Windows 7. It works with Windows 8, 8.1 & 10. Guess they want you to upgrade.

Hi I know I am a bit late but just wanted to add that the Intel 3165, Intel 7265, and Intel 8260 all support the keyboard and mouse on a fresh Windows 7 install. I would say that it is highly probable that most if not all of Intel's BT / Wifi cards support this however because I don't have them I can not verify that they would work. Note that you need to have both the Wifi drivers and the Bluetooth drivers. Also on non Intel CPUs you will most likely also need chipset drivers installed first. (This happened to me where my i3 laptop worked fine and my FX 8350 required its chipset drivers to see the BT correctly) Hope this helps all.

It's working with other computers. I have upgraded the driver to the latest for the NUC, but it does not work. The earlier version did not work either. I guess the latest drivers is not compatible with the mouse.

I'm assuming that you are using Logitech MX Master 2S, rather than Logitech MX Master 2H. If I'm right, this mouse may be connected to your NUC using Logitech Unified Receiver as well, without using NUC Bluetooth. However, if you insist to connect using Bluetooth, uninstall the Bluetooth Driver, reboot your NUC and download and install the latest driver version 22.110.0.2. This driver is validated for your NUC.

No problem for me. I've even downloaded the latest driver package and reinstalled the driver. Still the old driver from 2006 version 10.0.22621.1 installed and the mouse can be paired (NUC8i7HVK + Windows 11).

Since it is greyed out it sounds like you are still using the microsoft driver provided, have you updated the driver to the one you downloaded? If so, are you able to post a screenshot of your driver information window? It is hard to diagnose not being able to see it first hand.

I am working on creating a touch pad device (custom hardware but similar to an android device) that acts as a touchscreen drawing pad similar to the Wacom Bamboo drawing pads. However, the key feature of the device is instead of connecting it to the computer with wires or via Bluetooth, it connects to the local WiFi network and searches for devices with a port open (currently 5000 for testing purposes). Currently, I have a client written in C that when launched opens up a DatagramSocket on port 5000 and waits for a custom UDP packet containing normalized X, Y, and pressure. Then, for testing purposes, I am putting the normalized X and Y into SendInput. SendInput "works" however injecting packets into the computers current mouse is not what I want. Instead, I want to have it considered as a seperate input device so programs like gimp will be able to detect it and assign custom functions based on the data (ie: have gimp utilize the pressure data).

The problem is I dont know where to start to create a driver that does the former. I have been extensively looking at the winddk thinking that might be the key. The problem with the winddk is I cannot find any documentation on creating a HID driver using data that is not from a ps/2 or usb. This tutorial got me thinking about using IOCTLs, but I am not really sure how to make them be considered as input.

If after BIOS restoration and EC reset, the touchpad is functional in the BIOS/UEFI screen but becomes inoperative upon entering the Windows system, please proceed to the next section to update the BIOS and drivers.

Please go to the ASUS support site to download and install the following drivers. Here you can learn more about How to search and download drivers. (The following pictures are the current version as a reference, please download the latest version from the ASUS Support Site.)

Fairly simple problem- I have a USB based KB/M setup with my retro machines, simply because I like those. They work fine in DOS, Windows 98SE, or whatever- but /not/ Windows 95. Why is this? I'm guessing it's because W95 ignores the BIOS legacy USB stuff and forces it to be seen as USB, and then doesn't have USB drivers. Do some generic drivers exist?

I could just use DOS or 98 on this PC, but I really would like to have 95 since that was the original OS and I have a thing for it.

Win95 OSR2 or newer is supposed to have USB support, but I tried this yesterday and I couldn't get it to work. The problem was the USB PCI card I was using only had drivers going back to Win98, and they weren't accepted by 95 (weirdly it would pick them up, but I could click "finish" as many times as I wanted after selecting the driver and nothing would happen.)

I do have drivers for the USB ports- it's a 1997 Dell, DX233? Something akin to that. First model that shipped with AGP, has a Riva 128 and an AWE64.

The problem is I can't find any generic drivers for KB/M at all, which seems odd. Flash drives? Sure. KB/M? NO!

The problem is not the motherboard drivers- that's all installed and full supported. The problem is a lack of USB keyboard drivers.

I don't even know why MSFT bothered to make win95 """"support"""""" USB if it was this shitty.

Guess they never bothered with HID drivers when they developed this USB support because it wasn't very important back then. I have a Compaq PC that shipped with Win98 where the BIOS had no Legacy USB support, and another MVP3 board (well into Win98 territory) that had very basic legacy support (keyboard only, and not without its faults). USB input devices were just not a big thing back when Win95 versions with USB support were released. 2351a5e196

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