Is it still possible to WHQL-certify drivers for Windows XP, given that it has reached its end of life?
Can you give an estimate of how painful the WHQL (Windows Logo for Hardware) certification process is? I see there is a 43 page step by step guide where the first step is installing Windows Server 200
Drivers for recent (64-bit) version of Windows must be signed before they\'ll load.Whi开发者_运维百科ch certificate issuers can supply a certificate suitable for this?If you\'re talking about Kernel-M
I\'m developing a virtual driver and QA needs to check out the x64 version on several Windows 7 machines. I have strictly followed the instructions on generating a certificate for test purposes,
My goal is to have the com0com serial driver install without popping up the install wizard on both WinXP and Win2000.
When installing a signed driver (i.e. with a properly signed .CAB) on Windows 7 through DpInst, unless it\'s a WHQL-signed driver, you cannot install it silently. If you run DpInst in the non-silent m
I\'ve got some drivers which are basically LibUSB-Win32 with a new .inf file to describe product/vendor IDs and strings which describe my hardware. This works fine for 32 bit windows, but 64 bit versi
We have an application that accepts an uploaded file, but intermittently throws a Socket closed exception.