HID compliant touch screen drivers Windows 10 x Device touchscreen. Manufacturer Generic. Drivers for Operating System s Windows 10 64bit. The touch screen has been mis-configured, or calibrated Try system restore to a time when it worked or go to the device manger to see if there are any HID devices that have an explanation mark or a question mark, uninstall them then re-scan for hardware changes this may fix the issue.
The touch screen is broken, this happens more than people think. Other things to try: Restart the computer, given the stability of computers these days, people don't reboot much. Clean the display with a soft, clean cloth. Sometimes a dirty screen will disable the touchscreen.
If you look at the screenshot below, you will see tons of HID listing. What looks like multiple devices are copies of original devices, and are termed as Ghost Devices.
These are previously installed devices which are no more enabled, but the drivers are still present in the computer. Follow the steps below to enable the touchscreen, and reinstall touchscreen driver if it has stopped working.
Windows 10 comes with a dedicated Troubleshooter section which can fix most of the common issues. When you run the Hardware Troubleshooter, it will check actually connected hardware, and remove the rest of them.
Just before we start, if this is an external touch device, make sure to connect it. It is possible that the drivers were never installed for the device because you had it disabled, and now it cannot be enabled unless you install the correct drivers.
Updating the drivers through Windows Update is the best bet. Most of the OEMs now deliver the update through the Windows Update delivery channel, and they are tested for compatibility. In case the driver is not available, you can always download them from the OEM website. Still having problems? Time to try reinstalling drivers. At the Search charm, type device manager and select Device Manager. Expand the Human Interface Devices section. Find the touchscreen; it's probably called HID-compliant touch screen.
Right-click it. For the location, try C: for a full search of your hard drive, making sure Include subfolders is selected. If that fails, try again.
But this time, select Update Driver Software, then Search automatically for updated driver software. And if that fails, right-click the touchscreen again, select Uninstall, and confirm. Then reboot. This will automatically reinstall the touchscreen driver that came with the computer. Still no luck?
Go to the manufacturer's website and see if there's an updated driver there. But make sure it's for your model. It's possible that your driver is just fine, but another setting in Device Manager could be blocking your touchscreen. If you find more than one of these, try each one. Select Properties. Click the Power Management tab.
Uncheck Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power. That might solve your problem, but at a cost. Your computer will use more power, shortening battery life.
If none of these pan out, it's probably a hardware problem. Bring it into a shop to have it fixed. If you're really bothered with this problem, continue to read the solutions below.
Many factors can result in the problem, such as HID-compliant mouse driver issue, malware or virus infection, HID hardware problem, etc.
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