You can also sometimes find other entries for which Windows has not loaded a suitable driver and that are labelled Unknown device. Those entries are for hardware for which Windows has not loaded a suitable driver. Some manufacturers are diligent to provide enough data back to Windows for identification, while others do not (hence the cryptic number). NOTE: My laptop is not connected to anything via Bluetooth in this state.ĭoes anyone here have a clue as to what these might be? I don't recall ever seeing them before, not since my laptop just updated to Windows 10 version 20H2, build 19042.ĮDIT: So basically these are entries for USB or Bluetooth devices that have been previously attached/connected but are not presently so. Well, upon rebooting, they're back again. So I uninstalled these two "offenders," let's call them 120 and 143. And yet, "device is working properly." Heck, if you don't even know what it is, how can you know it's working right? Go figure. Who names their driver like this? No driver provider, no manufacturer. Somehow I have a couple entries there that look very peculiar. "Other Devices" in the Device Manager list is rather small, contained, and so my hope is that I can satisfy this dangling annoyance. and told "yeah, that's a rabbit hole, so forget about it." Yes, us folks who have OCD tendencies must refrain from the focus as one looks at Windows logs for Application and System, wondering why there are warnings and errors appearing for various things. I know, technically speaking, none of this matters in terms of a Windows 10 computer functioning normally.