Amit Posted January 6, 2007 Share Posted January 6, 2007 There were two areas that said bad drivers: Under IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers: Standard Dual Channel PCI IDE Controller and Under System Devices: NVIDIA Network Bus Enumerator I was wondering how these are usually updated and if they are a part of other drivers. I have the latest graphics and nForce drivers Thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Amit Posted January 14, 2007 Author Share Posted January 14, 2007 Anyone know? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators Andavari Posted January 14, 2007 Moderators Share Posted January 14, 2007 Just because some scanning site says it's corrupt doesn't mean it's true. I'd image it's like aggressive registry cleaners that are notorious for removing valid registry data, e.g.; a false positive. I'm no hardware expert however that 'Standard Dual Channel PCI IDE Controller' would most likely be installed by Windows and be a Microsoft component, I've personally never seen an update in that area for any system I've had. Although the NVIDIA one I don't know about, so visiting their website may turn up something. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MikeW Posted January 14, 2007 Share Posted January 14, 2007 I think you will find they are part of your mother board chipset. Plenty of info if you google it Win 7 Home Premium 64 bit - IE11 - Nod32 - Mbam pro Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tarq57 Posted January 15, 2007 Share Posted January 15, 2007 If this is touchstone.com, I've had the same thing. Went to Nvidea and downloaded the latest driver package appropriate to my 'pooter. (That was a bit of a learning curve.) After installation, the driveragent scan reported similar results. I elected not to use the service after that, as it seemed clear to me there were no newer drivers available for the network bus enumerator. The others updated good as gold. I think Andavari has it spot on, especially as they want you to pay for the drivers after they've told you what's ""bad". Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Amit Posted January 16, 2007 Author Share Posted January 16, 2007 Just because some scanning site says it's corrupt doesn't mean it's true. I'd image it's like aggressive registry cleaners that are notorious for removing valid registry data, e.g.; a false positive. I think Andavari has it spot on, especially as they want you to pay for the drivers after they've told you what's ""bad". I had the same thoughts but I was just curious Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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