![]() ![]() You said "after a recent update" but did not say if it was a Windows update or not but if it was you can look at your Update History and if you can spot the offending update and perhaps uninstall it. This is why in Windows 7 and 10 you can configure Windows Update to not offer or accept any hardware driver updates from MS and it is a prudent adjustment to make: Most folks blindly install all updates that come from Microsoft without looking at them thinking that MS must know what they are doing but MS doesn't know what they are doing especially when it comes to hardware (video, audio, network, USB, printer, etc.) drivers. Sounds like it might be another one of those "Windows Update broke my computer" kind of topic. ![]() Was the "recent update" a Windows Update and if so.
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