So there I was with my brand new Intel Core 2 Duo laptop. As far
as I could tell, everything was working right out of the box. Then I
began to transfer some of my older computer's files such as my web
browser's bookmarks, profiles, documents and other similar types of
data. I used one of the more popular utilities to help me speed
through this rather laborious process. And after I was done,
everything seemed to be working just fine, until I rebooted.
Then bad things began to happen. The first and most annoying
thing was with my WiFi connection. It would identify my WiFi
connection but it wouldn't log on to it. The only way I could get it
to work was forcing a manual reconnection by doing a Windows repair.
That process causes Windows to do a disconnect and reestablish the
connection. After that, the WiFi connection worked just fine until I
rebooted again. It just wouldn't see the WiFi until I repeated the
repair process. I tried everything. I checked every option, tested
every connection, nothing. Finally at the suggestion of my radio
talk show's co-host, I looked at the Intel Centrino driver version
and date. It was old. In fact, it was as old as my former laptop's
driver because actually it was my former laptop's driver that I had
inadvertently copied over to the newer machine. Updating the driver
instantly fixed the entire problem. So what's a driver?
A driver is a small piece of software that controls different
kinds of hardware on your computer, usually referred to as a device.
Every device, whether it be a printer, disk drive, keyboard or even
the WiFi hardware inside your laptop must have a driver. Many
drivers, such as the keyboard driver come with the operating system.
That's a good thing since you'd be hard pressed if your computer's
keyboard didn't function so you can be fairly confident that the
driver for it is already there. For other devices however, you may
need to load a new driver when you connect the device to your
computer. Windows comes with a large database of drivers for a wide
variety of devices and peripherals but even Microsoft can't be
expected to have them all preloaded. That's why most any piece of
hardware you plan to attach to your computer comes with a CD that
contains the driver for it.
Another good example of how a driver effects hardware is the
mouse.
Connecting just about any kind of mouse to your computer will see
it operate because most generic drivers will at least recognize any
mouse's left and right buttons and even the scroll wheel since just
about every mouse made these days has those. But if your mouse has
several other buttons that give it additional abilities, or lets you
assign functions to those buttons, you will most definitely need the
specific mouse driver from the company that made the mouse to
utilize
them. Otherwise it will only work as a standard two-button mouse.
Other devices may not be so forgiving. A device with an older
driver may not work at all or wok improperly. Like my WiFi did. The
Intel Centrino driver worked but failed to connect as I described.
So having the proper, updated drivers for all of your devices is
extremely important. But how can one keep up with the thousands of
drivers and be assured that the ones you have are the latest
versions? That sounds like a job for Driver Agent.
Driver Agent (
)
is a website that can examine all of your computer's device drivers
in just a few moments. Just log in and Driver Agent will first
locate and then compare the version numbers of all your drivers to
its database of well over a hundred thousand device driver updates.
After the examination, Driver Agent will display a screen of the
drivers it found along with a check list of which ones are current
and which ones need updating.
After seeing the results, you can choose to open a Driver Agent
subscription. After you're a member, you can instruct Driver Agent
to automatically update any driver that needs updating, all from the
Driver Agent website. The decision to update is based on several
factors and just not the version number. Factors like the driver
date and even reverse compatibility are considered before the update
takes place.
Joining Driver Agent requires a one year subscription of $29.95.
This fee entitles you to unlimited use for all of your computers.
And now for the bad puns finish. As any golfer will tell you,
using the right driver lets you perform at your best. And you should
always be a defensive driver. So defend yourself from the wrong
driver with Driver Agent. It's the only way to compute.