Once you know the real chipset/vendor:
| Device Type | Safe Download Source | |-------------|----------------------| | Motherboard chipset, audio, LAN, SATA | Motherboard manufacturer (Dell, HP, Lenovo, Asus, MSI, Gigabyte) | | Graphics (NVIDIA, AMD, Intel) | NVIDIA.com, AMD.com, Intel.com | | Network (Wi-Fi, Ethernet) | Realtek, Intel, Qualcomm, Broadcom official websites | | Bluetooth, card readers, USB | Windows Update (optional updates) | | Unknown/hard-to-find | Microsoft Update Catalog (catalog.update.microsoft.com) |
Sometimes OCR or text corruption changes:
Because I-Inc monitors are older, Windows 10 and Windows 11 will usually install a generic "Generic PnP Monitor" driver. This works for basic display, but it may prevent you from using the native resolution (1920x1080) or cause blurry text.
There are three methods to get the correct driver:
Typing unusual device strings into a search engine often leads to:
Instead of using that exact keyword, identify the real hardware ID.
Use one of these trusted databases:
Example:
If you find VEN_8086&DEV_24F3 → that is an Intel Wireless Adapter, not “Dnub-at1-236b.”
In 99% of cases, Dnub-at1-236b is either: