An outdated or confusing driver can ruin your day at your desk. From not being able to connect to a printer to your computer not recognizing the device, a faulty driver can even stop otherwise reliable computers and equipment from working.
One of the pillars of the Windows K2 initiative is improving OS, driver and application reliability. At WinHEC 2026 (Windows Hardware Engineering Conference), Microsoft worked with PC manufacturers, hardware suppliers, chip makers and designers to build a better ecosystem.
- Architecture: We invest heavily in hardening kernel-mode drivers and enabling third-party kernel-mode driver transitions to user-mode drivers or Microsoft authored class drivers. This is to ensure higher driver safety, reliability and stability. User-mode driver investments include performance updates to PCIe devices with DMA support, as well as a Wi-Fi stack (coming soon). Class driver investments include Soundwire Device Class for Audio (SDCA), I3C class driver implementation, NCM USB ethernet class driver, as well as continuous improvements to existing class 1 drivers in Windows 11.
- Trust: We’re raising the bar for trusted partners and trusted drivers, including robust partner verification, enhanced automated analysis and renewal. Windows Hardware Compatibility Program requirements.
- Life cycle: We’re improving driver lifecycle management through better Windows Update catalog hygiene, including deprecation of outdated or low-quality drivers, improved SBOM matching, and faster problem analysis via driver symbols.
- Quality measures: We are expanding the measurement of drive quality beyond crashes to include stability, functionality, performance, power and thermal impact, giving partners clearer signals to improve the real customer experience.
Because drivers connect Windows to chips, peripherals, and other components, a weak driver can drag down the entire computing experience.
Third-party drivers usually run in the Windows Kernel for maximum performance, but this one failure can crash the entire OS. Moving these drivers to User mode isolates them from the system kernel. If a user-mode driver fails, it can restart independently without affecting the rest of your computer.
Microsoft recently went on sale Cloud-Initiated Driver Recoverythis allows users to revert to a known working driver after a faulty update. While this is a welcome addition, it would be better to have fewer driver problems than to have better ways to fix them.
At WinHEC, Microsoft presented a keynote and held workshops to discuss the new driver initiative. Hands-on labs and demos were also available for engineers to give hands-on experience and demonstrate tools.
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