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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This solves the issue in Ubuntu.However, I couldn't find similar commands for Windows 10. My only resort is restarting Windows 10. I have tried updating the driver. It says that that my mouse driver is the latest driver. Fn key + Mouse disable/enable does nothing on Windows 10. However, Fn key + Mouse does work on Ubuntu.

The driver ID looks like HID\DLL06E4&COL01, i.e. a root ID and a device ID, with a \ in between. Note that the output from listclass shows additional data in the device line. You just want the first and second parts, separated by \. Don't include the second \ or anything after that.

This puts the pnputil command to restart the device driver into the clipboard. I almost always have a command window open anyway, so I just run this, and then open a second command window with administrator privilege, paste the command, problem solved.

Suddenly after a power failure which caused my PC to shutdown abruptly, I noticed that the mouse pointer was missing after I started the PC. When I went to see the device status, the device was showing a yellow triangle and the following message was displaying in the device status.

Uninstall your mouse driver, then unplug it from the computer and then reconnect it again. Be careful when choosing a checkbox during the driver uninstall that allows you to completely remove the driver.

Use a program like SamDrivers (freeware) and install your drivers using the program SDI Drivers included in SamDrivers. Your system can tell you that your drivers are completely up-to-date, but that's not always true.

I had this same issue occurring and had no idea what was happening and tried everything until I stumbled across the second mouse driver. If I disabled just that device driver (not the other one that is the true mouse), then I had no more jumping problems.

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.

My Elecom Huge arrived today, but when I installed and ran the Elecom Mouse Assistant 5 software in my Windows 11 Home PC, it won't start. When I try to run it, instead of the app starting, the following dialog box pops up and when I click on OK, the default Windows mouse driver app opens up.

The installation app did say to uninstall any other mouse drives. I'm a long-time Kensington trackball user, so I uninstalled the MouseWorks software in addition to a Microsoft Keyboard/Mouse driver and a Razer driver that were on my machine from previous builds, but none of this allowed the Elecom Mouse Assistant to start. (Before I uninstalled the Microsoft driver, when I clicked OK on the above dialog box, it opened up the MS configuration app, so it appears to be trying to open up whatever the default mouse driver is after the "error" message.)

A mouse driver is an important part of a computer and it is commonly included with the Windows operating system. To let the machine communicate with a mouse, a device driver is essential. If your mouse functions incorrectly, perhaps it is the issue with the driver. You need to download, install, update or reinstall the mouse driver.

If you cannot find a proper version, try to download and install a mouse driver via a driver update tool. On the market, many programs are worth recommending and you can use Driver Easy, IObit Driver Booster, Dell Command Update, AVG Driver Updater, HP Support Assistant, Dell SupportAssist, etc. to automatically scan for the system and install the latest drivers including mouse driver for Windows 11/10.

Since it's not being added automatically to the Devices & Drivers, I'd like to manually add a driver (*.inf, *.sys, etc) for a specialized mouse (Contour) to my Windows PE 3.1 (64-bit) Rescue Media CD. Is that possible?


If there is a way to inject it, please provide step by steps because in Advanced/Devices & Drivers there's no "Add Driver" button, only an "Update" button.


I've tried adding a "Mouse" folder under c:\boot\macrium\Drivers but I'm not getting anywhere that way.


I'm running Windows 7 64-bit on an HP workstation.



Helix Software Company released a commercial application called Multimedia Cloaking in 1994. The package included "cloaked" substitutes for CD-ROM extensions, Disk/CD-ROM cache and mouse drivers. For the mouse driver, this meant a 1K stub in conventional memory and the bulk of the (Logitech Version 6.33) driver in extended memory.

The Logitech DOS mouse driver since MouseWare 6.50 was enabled to take advantage of CLOAKING as well, thereby reducing the mouse driver's memory footprint visible to DOS applications from 27 KB to 1 KB.

This may reflect a technology exchange between Logitech and Helix Software. It means that you may be able to use the cloaking for your mouse without having to get Helix Multimedia Cloaking. I have not checked to see whether this statement about MouseWare is true or not, but it's great news if true.

A really interesting thing that I saw when looking Helix up is that the cloaked drivers are supposed to run faster because they are running in 32-bit mode instead of 16-bit mode. Makes sense but not sure that it actually makes any real world difference.

I managed to get QEMM's advertised 634k free conventional memory in the past. Netroom likely requires a 386's MMU resources, all the cloaked drivers definitely required it. Also, QEMM had a similar feature called "stealth".

UMBPCI generates the UMBS from Shadow-RAM and not from XMS. Often DMA in Shadow RAM is not supported which lets floppy disk access fail and disallows to load caching drivers like smartdrv to Shadow-RAM.

Sorry to dig up this topic - I actually used Cutemouse but its compatibility with DOS games is rather iffy. In fact, the first game I tried, the mouse went haywire when I pressed the right mouse button. I had to revert back to my old PS/1 mouse driver. Anyone know another low-memory mouse driver?

What I find works best with wireless mice is to get a USB 2.0 extension cable and try to locate the receiver dongle as close to the mouse as possible (I tape it underneath my desk about where the mousepad is).

Note that NT4's USB support is spotty at best, and it has an absolutely HORRID track record for mice via USB (they were always the hardest to get working). I'm pretty sure you may be relegated to W2K if you need mouse support on that box, especially with a legacy-free PC.

I am seeing this pop up ALOT with client devices. USB is hosed, I suspect an update did it. Had to reset both PC's after hours of driver install / uninstall. Tried wired Plain Jane keyboards and mice to no avail, touchscreen no longer working, had to give up and start over. Both were Dells as well.

Yes, most posts are old stuff or the printer kind and I have seen it too on some of my machines. It was one of those play around until it works, then forget about it moments later though. I'm still Win7 / Win10 right now, so just seeing some of the weird drivers and permission stuff.

If it's an Intel usb chipset, get the drivers from Intel. OEMs and Microsoft often have seriously outdated hardware drivers. In some cases, dell's own bios updates for Spectre patching on some optiplex machines hosed the USB ports and the Dell provided drivers were too old to fix it. The drivers from Intel were the only way to fix it.

I am having the same issue with, now 2 computers, at a client where they have tried different keyboards/mice on the affected computers and all show up as "The drivers for this device are not installed. (Code 28) There are no compatible drivers for this device."

I've run into USB driver issues with a few older printers and it turned out they don't work well on USB 3 ports. If you have any USB 2 ports try using them instead. Kinda strange, but it's worked for me on a few things.

I tried a different keyboard and mouse. This is definitely is a driver issue because both sets of k/m work in the BIOS. I tried all the USB ports and as soon as Windows 10 gets to the login screen, the k/m lights go off and don't work. The only way I can use the machine is to LogMeIn to it (that might be something too?).

The only thing I can think of is that this model of Dell Precision was not tested in the Fall Creator update back in OCT17 by Dell. Drivers were not updated, so either some other driver might work or there is no telling if something could hose the drivers all together. It also could be possible that Windows 10 is not supported for this machine all together. 2351a5e196

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