Many Windows 10 users complain about the HID compliant touch screen missing from Device Manager. Are you also bothered by the issue? This post of MiniTool summarizes several effective troubleshooting methods for you.
The Hardware and Devices troubleshooter is a Windows built-in tool that can help troubleshoot the issues related to the hardware and devices. If the HID-compliant touch screen driver is missing, you can try running this troubleshooter.
As you know, the Registry Editor holds many key values in Windows OS. If the values are configured improperly, then it may cause some problems like the HID compliant touch screen missing. To fix the issue, you should check if the key value of the touch screen is correct.
If the HID compliant touch screen missing problem just appears after you install some Windows updates, then you can perform a system restore to revert your system to an earlier date when your touch screen works fine. To restores your Windows system, the system restores point is commonly used. You can read this post to learn more detailed steps.
I have the HP Notebook - 15-ay103dx and my touchscreen is not working. I go to Device Manager and even click on show hidden devices yet I still don't see the HID-compliant-touchscreen device so I'm wondering if there is a driver I can install and if it can be supplied.
I have made no software changes but did fresh installed windows 10 twice. I ran the UEFI test but you didn't show which component test category the touchscreen was under. I couldn't find any checkbox for the touchscreen rather I did see one for touchpad but that's not it.
If it works on bios, it's a software issue: please update the BIOS & Chip-set drivers from the HP website, if the issue persists, reinstall windows using the recovery partition or the recovery media to fix the issue.
As per the other post I made just couple of days ago: I might be barking the wrong tree but is this not a sign that touchscreen (as in, touchscreen itself only) has simply died and is no longer recognised by OS?
So I have a Microsoft Surface Laptop 2, i5. I upgraded to Windows 11 about a month ago all was fine until I decided to install my graphics card update (Intel(R) UHD Graphics 620) through Intel Update & Install. Since then, I began to get a BSOD after I had put my computer to sleep a couple of times. The keyboard lit up and nothing would appear on the screen and after waiting over a couple minutes, the BSOD would appear as stop code INTERNAL_POWER_ERROR.
After googling the problem, I figured it is a driver error. I downloaded Outbyte Driver Updater and carried out a scan. It found numerous drivers that were not updated. So after updating them (and setting a restore point), I thought hey presto, all was fixed. But NO! What I realised was that my touch screen stopped working! I decided to carry out all the usual checks, restart computer, uninstall drivers, safe mode etc etc, but nothing worked. I did notice that once I restart my computer, my touch screen works, but not the gestures, such as Zoom in/out pinches AND after putting the head down of the laptop so it goes to sleep, and then turning it back on, the touch screen fully STOPS working.
I checked device manager and HID compliant touch screen driver was missing. Though there are two other touch drivers - Intel(R) Precise Touch Device and Koga Extended Touch Device. I found the HID compliant touch screen driver to be updated by Outbyte Updater so I tried to system restore to restore it back to before the driver was updated. Neither the Outbyte Updater or Windows could do a proper system restore, I do not know for whatever reason, whenever the computer restarts an error message said the system restore could not be completed. What is worse the BSOD still appeared after putting the laptop to sleep a few times.
After covering all the avenues I had googled, I came to the conclusion that I need to reset my laptop to factory settings. I did this, once with Windows 11, then again with to Windows 10 and then back to Windows 11, and each time the HID Compliant Touch Screen Driver was missing in Device Manager (I even tried show hidden drivers). I thought the drivers reset too following a full proper clean reset of Windows but i guess not! Now I also lost the restore points of Outbyte Driver before the HID touch was updated (Outbyte are going to get the worst review after this!!)
So currently I am with no touch screen unless I restart my laptop and until I close the lid and put it to sleep. And if I do that a few times, my keyboard lights up but screen remains black and I eventually get the BSOD INTERNAL_POWER_ERROR come up and restarts my computer. I have screenshotted a picture of my device manager showing hidden drivers for someone to help.
I have also done Scan for Hardware changes on device manager - nothing. I have done the Windows troubleshooting as advised online and different forums - nothing resolved or picked up there. I have done Windows Update - nothing. I have reverted Windows Update - nothing.
I have also tried to download touch screen drivers from the Microsoft Catalogue and even The Surface Laptop 2 Drivers and Firmware on the Microsoft website but to absolutely nothing solving my issue. Is there any way to download the HID Compliant Touch Screen Driver separately? I keep seeing the same answers online as above - I need something different. I need a solution. Please can someone help!! Can I just put it out there, yes I absolutely sure my touch screen was working absolutely fine before because I would use it every single time! I wish I had never updated my drivers!!! I need new methods or solutions please!!
I'd advise you to reset your computer, keep Windows 11 and download only what's missing in Device Manager or go to the motherboard manufacturer website and download it's appropriate ones. NEVER use those drivers download tools (e.g. Driver Easy, Driver Booster) because they often cause more harm than good.
As for the Windows 11... Do your manufacturer offer drivers in Windows 11? Might be a safe choice to stay in Windows 10 until it does or the O.S. becomes more stable. My experience is that there is little to none compatibility issues, but it's hard to fully understand the scope one driver or another might interfere on your system.
searched for a solution, worked through device manager, read the boards, etc. absolutely did not want to spend half my life restoring to factory settings and applying all of the updates, software, etc again. by chance (!) i removed the stylus pen from the machine and hit restart. touch screen is now working again !!! :) also working with the stylus pen again!
So I'm switching over from Windows and everything has been fairly smooth (for a Linux install at least). My laptop has a touchscreen, so I was trying to configure that, but lspci, lsusb, and xinput don't show any touchscreen devices. The laptop is a Lenovo Ideapad S740-15IRH. I ended up botting back into Windows to check the device and Device Manager shows
in the hardware IDs under HID-compliant touch screen. I also searched dmesg and journalctl for "touch" and "ELAN", but no such luck there. Is there a super obscure kernel module or something that supports it because I'd really like to have touchscreen available.
Did you bother reading it? Or are you expecting me to spoon feed you like a little baby? Please read the touchscreen ArchWiki page, then read the contents of the file, then engage your brain and expend some effort. TIA.
I have yet to not get a touchscreen to work, but I almost always need to install a driver, instead of using what came with the hardware/software. Example, if you do a jog or something that requires a long press, most everything out of the box a long press will trigger right click event. This is just something you will need to deal with.
What kind of touch event are you checking for in Ignition? We are running it on Windows 10 and have found drivers can be an issue, but have it working reliably using the mouse up event to check for touches.
In all honestly I think you should try perspective. These issues completely go away with it and there are a huge amount of benefits. We have multi National companies using only perspective for all of their plants, including real time HMI Control, Monitoring & Reporting.
Ive been searching this site for help with a touchscreen issue I am having through using Ubuntu 14. I noticed that there are a few users on the site having the same particular problem that I also am with the same machines. I am using an HP envy x360 and my touchscreen functions properly using Windows but can barely even be detected (using lsusb, xinput, lsmod, etc.) by the Ubuntu OS and is completely non-responsive even after manually enabling hid-multitouch and other recommended fixes Ive found on the site.
My question is have anyone had any breakthroughs in success with finding a solution to this issue? I wish it was as easy as the NetworkManager wifi fix by blacklisting the acer_wmi module which is also a bug associated with this machine, but of course it is not as simple.
It would be great to hear that progress was made on this issue .. if not someone please let me know that I should stop searching because I have been at debugging this problem for about 6 days now. haha.
Would you be happy with an HID-compliant touchscreen running another OS (or OS X with drivers installed), and then a full-screen VNC to your driver-less OS X machine? You might not be able to tell the difference.
I have tried searching the forum for an answer but did not find anything for the Ubook Pro N4100. After a windows 10 update the only thing that seems to not be working correctly is the touchscreen. There are no yellow exclamation marks in Control Panel.
Any help would be appreciated.
Goodix making fingerprint sensors, so probably main touch driver is HID-Compliant touch screen.I had a problem like that on another laptops and tablets, sometimes it was because gyroscope and sometimes i had to install original windows.
c80f0f1006