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I know Dell and HP both have self extracting executable for most drivers they offer out. Make sure that any downloaded installers are extracted first to where you can see the inf, cat, and sys files. So, download all the drivers and put them into one directory. Get the Drivers! For Windows 10, Microsoft has done a great job of letting Windows 7/8.1 drivers install (or attempt to) and maintain a large percentage of support. This process is very common and really, this applies to Windows Vista (and up) but as I went to inject drivers to Windows 10 media from my Windows 8.1 machine I met an old-friend-of-an-error and figured this was worth sharing. If you’re without MDT and/or SCCM or just like to have a USB installer ready for anything, you don’t have the luxury of a driver package and just want all the drivers to automatically be there when Windows installs.
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Usually this just entails adding some drivers and–for the most part–plug and play is nice enough to install everything for me. Since I am an OSD guy, I like to make sure when a system is built all the drivers are there (even for my test machines and ad-hoc builds to “see if it works”).
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So Windows 10 is here with its second build (9860) in its “Technical Preview”.
![Driver injection tool windows 7](https://kumkoniak.com/29.jpg)