If you've lost your driver discs, you're unable to find drivers on the manufacturer's web site or Windows Update can't configure your hardware, use this tool to quickly find and install all missing drivers.

If you're a PC technician, keep Snappy Driver Installer on your USB flash drive or external hard drive and take it with you wherever you go. In environments with no Internet access you can quickly get things working. No more searching for drivers after a clean install, just let Snappy Driver Installer do it's thingand your job will be done in no time.


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Snappy Driver Installer Origin is a portable Windows tool to install and update device drivers. It can be used offline to install drivers where Internet isn't available. No more searching for drivers after a clean install, just let Snappy Driver Installer Origin do it's thing and your job will be done in no time. The perfect technician's tool.

State of the art driver matching algorithm. Fully portable so you can run it from a USB flash drive. Built in application and driver pack updates. Can be fully automated using the built in scripting engine. Multilingual interface. Built-in and custom themes. Supports Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 8.1, 10, 11.

Firing up SDI for the first time is interesting because it needs more just under 37GB of driver files to offer a complete collection of stuff from which to work. Even so, the tool is smart enough to focus only on driver packs (7ZIP files of related drivers) that a target PC needs. For this target PC, that involved just a bit over 3 GB across 8 different archive files. SDI was able to handle all the out-of-date drivers on its own, in about 30 minutes (most unattended, while I did something else).

For me, SDI does the job nicely and keeps my PCs current without annual subscription fees. And because I routinely shoot an image backup before mucking about with drivers, I can say no such update has ever hosed one of the PCs under my purview.

I was helping a friend quickly get her drivers up to date over discord and she went to the download page which to her looked fine. She downloaded the app and ran it, it sat stuck installing things at 95% for quite some time and I got suspicious as she mentioned using "recommended" and other things for the installer. I remember the SDI tool being basically a zip you extracted somewhere and ran the program, then got indexes and searched for the latest stuff for your machine so I asked for a screenshot and realized something was up.

I have a Surface Book 2 that is fully up to date according to Windows Update. However, I've been experiencing performance issues. Long story short, I found some people recommending Snappy Driver Installer. When I run it, it recommends I update a whole slew of drivers:

If you're having performance issues, the problem is rarely drivers. The symptom of driver problems is generally that the hardware doesn't work, certain features aren't available, or you encounter hardware bugs in operation.

These driver installer utilities tend to be somewhat of a scam. There isn't really a problem you need them to fix. They fill a market hole for people who think they always need the "latest" drivers. These utilities identify most of the drivers in your system and claim they all need updating or there is a better one available. That makes them look valuable. But the vast majority of what they report is just wrong.

Many of the "updates" they report are actually older drivers than what is installed. They are often the wrong drivers, or a variant of what is installed, like the vendor's generic equivalent of the OEM driver on your system, which has been optimized for your hardware. Letting it do wholesale replacement of your drivers is more likely to create issues you don't currently have than to solve any problem. Even if it doesn't actively harm the system's functioning, you won't see any improvement in performance.

When I used Windows, these utilities were all the rage. I discovered the reality first-hand with many different popular utilities. I didn't have any problems, I just wanted to make sure I had the latest and best drivers. Initially, I just let them run and do their thing, and they created problems that I hadn't had. Then I started scrutinizing their recommendations and discovered that virtually everything they reported was either unnecessary or actually a bad recommendation.

As a general rule, if the hardware is functioning properly, don't change drivers. The only time to look at driver replacement is if your driver gets corrupted, or you encounter a problem of hardware not working correctly.

If Windows Update or your hardware manufacturer notifies you of a driver update, consider installing it. But look at what they claim the update does. If it is being offered to fix a problem for hardware you don't have, there's no benefit to updating.

If you do update a driver other than a generic Windows driver offered by Windows Update, the best source is your computer manufacturer's web site. The OEM driver will be optimized for your hardware. If they no longer offer the driver you need, try the hardware component manufacturer's web site.

In general, you should rarely need to update or change any driver if the hardware is not malfunctioning. The main exception would be if a newer driver is needed to support features or functionality not offered by the original driver.

personally i don't trust this kind of programs, they suggest tonz of drivers while trust me, 1) the majority of them are outdated, 2) the quality of the drivers isn't guaranteed (will they work for real? are there any serous bugs or security bugs that coming with them?)3) probably Microsoft drivers are mostly basic drivers with some exceptions i guess though they work fine... i am not sure where these drivers are coming from

also keep one of the golden rules in computers "If it's working, leave it be, if not and you have no other option kick it's azz until it says "please no more""and same goes for drivers too, if the default drivers are working, just don't change them... and since you know what hardware your computer has, using manufacturer drivers imho is the best option.

and since you mentioned that you have a poor performance drivers are the last thing i would check and in your case since as far i see your hardware is in overall GREAT for running windows 10 i would check

Either I can't find it or it doesn't exist. I neither can find a proper 'How-to file' nor wiki (nor a scan button on the software itself).I downloaded and set up the small file version and upon clicking 'SDI_x64_R539.exe' (which I thought was to install) boom the software pops up with the results. It took a fraction of a second. How could this be? Can it actually scan that quickly? Hence I looked for the scan button but there was none.

On the left I had "expert mode'', ''not installed'', ''newer'' and ''better match'' checked as well as "Not installed. all I have is one entry showing up in red. And on the top right corner the "Install" button shows '0'I then checked the "Standard" button and again, in a flash a whole bunch of drivers are listed. And on the right hand corner clicking on the "Select All" button does nothing (I assumed the green 'Install' button would have numbers on it now with so many drivers listed but it is still '0')

Also there is no way of me knowing if I have an old driver or not, if any new drivers exist or not, etc. etc. so either I have no clue to what I'm doing or something is wrong somewhere.

SDI scans when opened. Very very fast scan is actually normal on this program. if the directory where you have SDI_x64_R539.exe at has an empty drivers folder and empty indexes folder (and you didnt point it at a different driver location) then you gave it nothing to match to.You should see a bar across the top that updates are available if you have an internet connection and did not firewall block it. Download the 'indexes' file and once complete SDI will know what packages contain drivers relevant to download for that machine so you can download only what you need. If you want to install drivers on different machines, download all packages. Once you have the indexes, it should be just about as quick but listing all the drivers...makes it only take seconds to compare what you have for hardware vs over 100GB of drivers (if uncompressed).

'not installed' 'newer' and 'better match' with 'not installed' checked is the recommended/default setting. 'standard' are devices running standard microsoft drivers and that SDI has no better match for. You cannot select to install a driver for something you have no driver installation for.

Hovering over a device entry with the mouse should bring a popup containing match details for what is installed and what is available; hold 'ctrl' to get it to pop up immediately. Shift will bring up information about all matches for that device in a different but similar view; mouse weel will scroll the 'shift' output while it is open.

Other than that, post contents of 'logs' folder andi can load the .snp file on my side (Load snapshot...) to compare it to my indexes as if I was running the program on your computer.

Not aware of any thorough documentation to the program; I have thought about making some youtube videos. I'd rather spend that time trying to track down the mess of how to identify 'tainted' .exes that have been found released in this project over the past few versions. ff782bc1db

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