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Windows Apps for Keyboard Drivers. VIMICRO USB PC Camera (VC0303) Free. Analog Devices ADI 198x Integrated HD Audio Driver Version A01. PC Pitstop - PC Performance Roots. PC Pitstop began in 1999 with an emphasis on computer diagnostics and maintenance. During the early days of the dot com.
- Intel Wireless Bluetooth is recommended for end users, including home users and business customers with Intel Wireless Bluetooth technology.
- January 13, 2021
- Windows 7/8/10
- 13 MB
- The latest Realtek Card Reader Controller Driver for the RTS5101, RTS5111, RTS5116, and RTS5169 chips.
- August 12, 2020
- Windows (all)
- 17.3 MB
- GoPro has now made it easier than ever to repurpose its latest action camera as a high-definition webcam.
- July 9, 2020
- Mac OS X
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- The Xbox 360 console software is updated periodically with new features, download the latest firmware to take advantage of them.
- May 17, 2020
- Mac OS X
- 1.3 MB
- Official Realtek Card Reader Driver for RTS5101/RTS5111/RTS5116/RTS5169.
- March 20, 2019
- Windows (all)
- 12.6 MB
- SteelSeries Engine 3 gives you everything you need in one single app. A unified platform that supports nearly all your SteelSeries gear.
- March 11, 2019
- Windows (all)
- 125 MB
- The Synaptics Gesture Suite device driver is now equipped with Scrybe Gesture Workflow Technology – the next generation in TouchPad-based PC interfaces.
- March 1, 2011
- Windows XP/Vista/7
- 50.9 MB
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- Windows (all)
- 82.6 MB
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- Windows 7 64-bit
- 87.7 MB
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- September 4, 2017
- Windows (all)
- 4.6 MB
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- May 6, 2017
- Windows 7 / 8
- 5.4 MB
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- January 16, 2017
- Windows (all)
- 71.1 MB
- Every peripheral. Every macro. Every preference, profile and Razer add-on. All ready to go, all the time, from anywhere.
- December 15, 2016
- Windows (all)
- 12.3 MB
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- December 13, 2016
- Windows (all)
- 114 MB
- This driver supports SD, SD High Capacity (HC), MMC, MS and MS pro serial cards for the VIA VX800, VX855, VX900, and VX11 chipsets built in MSP PCI card reader.
- September 19, 2016
- Windows Vista / 7 / 8
- 14.0 MB
- Download Mouse and Keyboard Center to get the most out of Windows.
- August 19, 2016
- Windows 8 64-bit
- 42.0 MB
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- 6.2 MB
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- August 8, 2016
- Windows 10
- 5.1 MB
- Operating system support: Windows (all).
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- 19.6 MB
- June 28, 2016
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- 795 KB
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- May 2, 2016
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- February 4, 2013
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- 66.6 MB
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- September 28, 2015
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- 11.6 MB
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- August 4, 2015
- Windows (all)
- 1.4 MB
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- July 23, 2015
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- 13.6 MB
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- July 13, 2015
- Windows XP/Vista/7
- 10.3 MB
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- April 1, 2015
- Windows 8 64-bit
- 150 MB
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- November 14, 2014
- Mac OS X
- 1.7 MB
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- November 11, 2014
- Windows (all)
- 120 MB
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- October 14, 2014
- Windows (all)
- 14.1 MB
- Operating system support: Windows 2000/XP.
- September 17, 2014
- Windows 2000/XP
- 2.5 MB
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- September 16, 2014
- Windows XP/Vista/7
- 4.0 MB
- June 5, 2014
- Windows 7 / 8 64-bit
- 2.7 MB
- June 5, 2014
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- 2.3 MB
- April 28, 2014
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- 40.8 MB
- April 28, 2014
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- 30.4 MB
- July 17, 2013
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- 120.1 MB
- April 17, 2014
- Windows Vista / 7 / 8
- 30.4 MB
- Operating system support: Windows Vista / 7 / 8.
- April 17, 2014
- Windows Vista / 7 / 8
- 29.2 MB
- Operating system support: Windows Vista / 7 / 8.
- April 4, 2014
- Windows Vista / 7 / 8
- 51.6 MB
- August 23, 2011
- Windows XP/Vista/7
- 18.9 MB
- Developed for World of Warcraft players by SteelSeries and Blizzard Entertainment, the World of Warcraft: Cataclysm MMO Gaming Mouse invokes the iconic imagery of Deathwing the Destroyer, leader of the black dragonflight and instigator of the Cataclysm.
- August 19, 2014
- Mac OS X
- 9.5 MB
- August 23, 2011
- Windows XP/Vista/7
- 28.1 MB
- October 3, 2011
- Windows XP/Vista/7
- 27.7 MB
- August 19, 2011
- Mac OS X
- 10.4 MB
- Operating system support: Windows Vista / 7 64-bit.
- February 22, 2011
- Windows Vista / 7 64-bit
- 54.6 MB
Application programs rely on a combination of user-mode and kernel-mode components to capture (input) and render (output) wave streams. A wave stream is a digital-audio stream whose data format is described by a WAVEFORMATEX or WAVEFORMATEXTENSIBLE structure.
An application can use either of the following software interfaces for wave rendering and capture:
Drivers Vimicro Input Devices
Microsoft Windows Multimedia waveOutXxx and waveInXxx functions
DirectSound and DirectSoundCapture APIs
The behavior of the waveOutXxx and waveInXxx functions is based on the capabilities of legacy wave drivers and devices. Beginning with Windows 98, the WDMAud system driver translates calls to these functions into commands to WDM audio drivers. However, by emulating the behavior of older software and hardware, the waveOutXxx functions sacrifice the 3-D sound effects and hardware acceleration that are now available through the DirectSound API. For more information about DirectSound and the Windows Multimedia wave functions, see the Microsoft Windows SDK documentation.
DirectSound and the Windows Multimedia wave functions are clients of the SysAudio system driver, which builds the audio filter graphs that process the wave and DirectSound streams. Graph building is transparent to the applications that use these software interfaces.
Wave Components
The following figure shows the user-mode and kernel-mode components that a wave application uses to render or capture a digital audio stream consisting of wave PCM data.
The rendering components appear on the left side of the preceding figure, and the capture components appear on the right. The boxes representing the wave miniport driver are darkened to indicate that these are vendor-supplied components. The other components in the figure are system-supplied.
At the top left of the figure, the wave-rendering (or 'wave-out') application interfaces to the WDM audio drivers through the waveOutXxx functions, which are implemented in the user-mode WinMM system component, Winmm.dll. The application reads blocks of wave audio samples from a file and calls the waveOutWrite function to render them.
WDMAud, which consists of both user-mode and kernel-mode components (Wdmaud.drv and Wdmaud.sys), buffers the wave data from the waveOutWrite call and outputs the wave stream to the KMixer system driver, which appears below WDMAud in the figure.
KMixer is a system component that receives wave PCM streams from one or more sources and mixes them together to form a single output stream, which is also in wave PCM format.
KMixer outputs a wave stream to a WaveCyclic or WavePci device, whose port and miniport drivers appear below KMixer on the left side of the preceding figure. The miniport driver binds itself to the port driver to form the wave filter that represents the underlying audio rendering device. A typical rendering device outputs an analog signal that drives a set of speakers or an external audio unit. A rendering device might also output digital audio through an S/PDIF connector. For more information about WaveCyclic and WavePci, see Wave Filters.
Alternatively, KMixer can pass its output stream to a USB audio device, which is controlled by the USBAudio class system driver (not shown in figure), instead of a WaveCyclic or WavePci device.
An adapter driver creates an instance of a WaveCyclic or WavePci port driver by calling PcNewPort with a GUID value of CLSID_PortWaveCyclic or CLSID_PortWavePci, respectively.
The right side of the preceding figure shows the components that are needed to support an application that captures wave data to a file. The wave-capture (or 'wave-in') application communicates with the WDM audio drivers through the waveInXxx functions, which are implemented in the WinMM system component.
At the lower right corner of the figure, the wave-capture device is controlled by wave miniport and port drivers. The port and miniport drivers, which can be of type WaveCyclic or WavePci, bind together to form a wave filter that represents the capture device. This device typically captures an analog signal from a microphone or other audio source and converts it to a wave PCM stream. The device might also input a digital audio stream through an S/PDIF connector.
The wave port driver outputs its wave stream either to KMixer or to WDMAud directly. The stream must pass through KMixer if it needs to be sample-rate converted before WDMAud receives it. A system that performs simultaneous rendering and capture of audio streams might require two instances of KMixer, as shown in the figure. Note that SysAudio automatically creates these instances as they are needed.
Alternatively, the source of the captured wave stream can be a USB audio device instead of a WaveCyclic or WavePci device. In this case, the USBAudio driver (not shown in figure) passes the stream to KMixer.
Regardless of whether the wave stream is captured by a USB device or by a WaveCyclic or WavePci device, KMixer performs sample-rate conversion on the stream, if needed, but does no mixing with other streams. KMixer outputs the resulting stream to Wdmaud.sys, the kernel-mode half of the WDMAud system driver. The user-mode half, Wdmaud.drv, outputs the wave stream to the application program through the waveInXxx functions, which are implemented in Winmm.dll. Finally, at the top of the figure, the wave-capture application writes the wave data to a file.
At the time that the wave-capture application calls the waveInOpen function to open the capture stream, it passes in a pointer to its callback routine. When a wave-capture event occurs, the operating system calls the callback routine with a buffer containing the next block of wave samples from the capture device. In response to the callback, the application writes the next block of wave data to the file.
DirectSound Components
Vimicro Webcam
The following figure shows the user-mode and kernel-mode components that are used by a DirectSound application program to render or capture wave data.
Drivers Vimicro Input Devices Usb
The rendering components are shown in the left half of the preceding figure, and the capture components appear on the right. The wave miniport drivers are shown as darkened boxes to indicate that they are vendor-supplied components. The other components in the figure are system-supplied.
At the top left of the figure, a DirectSound application loads wave data from a file to a sound buffer that the user-mode DirectSound system component (Dsound.dll) manages. This component sends a wave stream to a WaveCyclic or WavePci device, whose port and miniport drivers appear at the lower left in the figure. If a hardware mixer pin is available on the device, the stream passes directly to the wave port driver, bypassing KMixer. Otherwise, the stream first passes through KMixer, which mixes it with any other simultaneously playing streams. KMixer outputs the mixed stream to the port driver.
As before, the miniport driver binds itself to the port driver to form the wave filter that represents the underlying audio rendering device. This device might play the stream through a set of speakers, for example.
Alternatively, the wave stream can be rendered by a USB audio device instead of a WaveCyclic or WavePci device. In this case, the stream cannot bypass KMixer; the USBAudio class system driver (not shown in figure) always passes the stream to KMixer.
The right side of the preceding figure shows the components that support a DirectSoundCapture application. The application records wave data that is receives from a WaveCyclic or WavePci capture device. This device converts an analog signal from a microphone, for example, to a wave stream. The device's wave port and miniport drivers appear at the lower-right corner of the figure. As shown in the figure, the port driver receives as input the stream from the miniport driver and outputs it either directly to the user-mode DirectSound component, Dsound.dll, or indirectly through KMixer. This depends on whether a hardware capture pin is available from the capture device.
Alternatively, the source of the captured wave stream can be a USB audio device. In this case, the stream cannot bypass KMixer; the USBAudio driver (not shown in figure) always passes the stream to KMixer.
If KMixer is inserted into the path of the capture stream, it performs sample-rate conversion on the stream, if needed, but does no mixing with other streams.
Vimicro Usb Camera Driver
At the top-right corner of the preceding figure, the application reads the wave data from the DirectSoundCapture buffer and writes it to the file.