Ms Mouse Driver Delirium Done

MS Mouse Driver Delirium Done

I’m still finding my way into a more perfect configuration on my “new” production PC . It is actually built around nearly 5-year-old technology, recently updated and expanded into a new NZXT Flo 6 case. Yesterday, I noticed something minor but annoying that I’ve seen before: my wireless mouse cursor was lagging, which means the tracking followed behind my hand movements. I *HATE* that. I also know that when it happens, it’s mostly owing to transceiver interference or driver issues. Because I’ve placed the transceiver high above my desk, I keyed in on driver issues. And sure enough, activating the MS Mouse and Keyboard driver put paid to my MS Mouse driver delirium.

How I Cured My MS Mouse Driver Delirium

I’d already downloaded and installed the MS Mouse and Keyboard Center drivers on this PC. What I hadn’t done, based on what I first saw in Device Manager (see lead-in graphic) was to make sure that the Mouse and Keyboard Center’s mouse driver was actually in use. Indeed, when I checked, it was running the generic “HID-compliant device” driver in the first position in the driver list on display in the screencap. Go figure!

To my surprise, the system asked for a reboot after I updated the mouse driver. Copilot tells me it’s because

The HID-compliant driver is a low-level, class-based driver. [That means r]eplacing it with a vendor-specific driver…often involves swapping out kernel-mode components that are actively in use.

That totally makes sense. And after said restart, the mouse lag problems disappeared completely. Thank goodness things sometimes work the way they should. That’s enough of a novelty here in Windows-World to earn my genuine gratitude. Now I can work and play without waiting for the cursor to catch up with me. What a relief!

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