Did you try searching those pages of drivers for "logitech". You might have to go scored earth on anything related to Logitech if you can't find those specific files...
Last resort would be to plug the camera back in so that you can find the drivers in Device Manager (view drivers by device)...
OK, if you run this in PowerShell it will output the drivers along with all their files. The clip part of the command copies the output to your clipboard, so after running it open something like Notepad and paste into that. You can then search for those .sys files, which hopefully should lead...
When you try and turn memory integrity back on, does it say the name of the driver that is blocking it?
You could try listing installed drivers from the command line, and then uninstalling it.
Open PowerShell as Admin and run this command which should list any drivers you've installed...
I don't think there is a Windows tool for doing this.
If you can boot a Linux live CD you may be able to use gdisk with commands:
x (for extra functionality)
r (for recovery and transformation)
g (for convert GPT to MBR)
w (for write the MBR partition table and exit).
You would then reboot...
To be fair, it's not really a basic task. It's actually quite non-trivial to do, technically speaking, not to mention high risk of something going wrong if the process were interrupted (which is likely why they don't provide the functionality). To expand your C drive in this case it has to...
There is more to how a floppy disk boots than just the files that are in the filesystem:
https://retrocomputing.stackexchange.com/a/5253
You need to write the FreeDOS image to the floppy disk using an image writer like WinImage. It should just be a case of selecting the first FreeDOS disk...
Another option is to temporarily enable SSH access on your Steam Deck, and then you can use SCP to transfer files over the network.
WinSCP is a good Windows client for this: https://winscp.net/eng/download.php
That does assume there are no indirect exploits (ie. the presence alone of vulnerable Office DLLs, EXEs, OCX type files being enough for something else to take advantage of them), and without checking 25 years worth of historical vulnerabilities its hard to say how many of those existed.
It's a...
I came across this recently, which was reasonably easy to use:
https://github.com/AaronFeng753/Waifu2x-Extension-GUI
I used it to upscale some early 2000s digital camera video from potato resolution, and interpolate the 10fps up to something resembling acceptable and the results were kind of...
Have a read through the overview of the filesystem and decide whether the things it brings to the table are things you need from a filesystem.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/storage/refs/refs-overview
For a normal drive, the answer is probably not and NTFS remains the go-to...
With 1080p the PS5 was, in almost every instance, internally producing a 4k output and the down sampling that to 1080p to send to the TV.
It should do the same with 1440p, but I remember reading that developers could optionally specifically allow their game to target 1440p so that no down...
I'd suggest just getting a 512GB or 1TB drive for your OS drive and then you don't have to worry about it too much. Smallest I'd suggest is 256GB, but you'll probably have to do some management from time to time with the amount of junk some applications still like to dump on C.
You might want...
People said these exact things about the PS4 Pro, and that had no shortage of support over its life (every game released since ~6 months prior to launch had to support it).
At the very least it will mean more games remain viable at 60fps (and higher) without having to compromise so much on the...
Passwordless for a Microsoft work account with their authenticator app has been flawless for me.
If you're talking about broader passkeys, it's a very mixed experience so far.
In terms of storing and creating passkeys, Apple's keychain seems to have a pretty reliable implementation. I...
The application be able to run after the executable has been re-named makes the issue seem like malware or misconfigured application control software, although why that would persist through the system restore I'm not sure.
You could try safe mode with no networking to see if it will start up...
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