

A list of USB devices that are active & connected to your PC will be displayed with a “ green light“.Right-click USBDeview.exe file (the one with a green icon) and select Run as administrator.Extract the archive content on to your desktop or anywhere on your hard-disk.Download the archive that suits the version of Windows that you have, from the download links above.Download USBDeview for 32 & 64 bit Windowsĭownload USBDeview 圆4 bit v2.75 How to uninstall a device driver with USBDeview It will allow the removal of any USB device driver previously installed in your system so that you can start fresh with a device installation, thus, preventing COM port conflicts and driver update issues. Same goes to Win 7 and Win8, which represent Microsoft Windows 7 and Microsoft Windows 8 respectively.The following tool is called “ USBDeview” developed by Nir Sofer (2006-2013 – all rigts reserved), a tool that will allow you to see active and inactive USB devices (ghost USB devices) installed in your Windows computer by their driver name and perform a number of operations on them like uninstall, disable, disconnect, disable+enable and others. Win XP refers to Microsoft Windows XP, while Win Vista refer to Microsoft Windows Vista. One version for Win XP and Win Vista and Win 7 and Win 8). one for Win XP, one for Win Vista, one for Win 7 and the 4th one for Win 8) or a single tool for all OS mention above (e.g. It can be one tool for each OS mention above (e.g. It would be also nice to have if it can inform end-user to plug their USB 3 device to a USB 3 port instead of a USB 2 port to take advantage of speed (assuming that the PC have the two version of USB port available.) The Info tab should basically shows which USB port can support which USB version. It should display a list of USB 2 or USB 3 devices connected to the USB port under the report tab. So, it should be as simple and straight forward as possible. The GUI should looks similar like the Igorware 64-bits checker as shown below:Įxcept that is shows USB 2 or USB 3 instead of 32 bit and 64 bits. The end-users have OS that are mainly Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7 and Windows 8, so the more OSs are supported, the better.

I want to be able to distribute the tool to end-users who don't know much about USB and the differences in the versions, they do know that "3 is better than 2". I'm looking for a gratis tool displays all my USB ports and devices and if they are USB 2 or 3.
