Resolved: How Organizational Controls Impact Windows Configuration
Troubleshooting Nonfunctional USB Ports on Windows 10/11 - Fixed
If you find one of your USB devices on Windows 10 isn’t working, read on. Whether it’s a USB mouse, keyboard, pen drive, printer, or some other USB devices altogether, this guide should resolve your problem.
Note that there are 5 possible solutions here. You may not need to try them all; just start at the top of the list and work your way down.
1:Check if the device itself is faulty
2:Check your power supply
3: Check your power management settings
4:Check your USB device drivers
5:Check your USB ports
Method 1: Check if the device itself is faulty
If the USB device was working before you upgraded to Windows 10, it’s unlikely to be faulty. But coincidences do occur. It’s certainly_possible_ that your device just happened to die right at the same time that you upgraded Windows. So it’s best to rule that possibility out for sure before spending time on more complex troubleshooting.
To check if the USB device is faulty, simply unplug it (‘Eject’ it if it’s a USB storage device) and plug it into another computer. If it works, the device is fine. If it doesn’t, then you’ve isolated the problem! You just need to buy a replacement.
Method 2: Check your power supply (laptop only)
Your laptop’s power supply delivers power to your USB ports. If, for some reason, it fails to do this properly, the devices plugged into those USB ports may stop working. Sometimes, this can be fixed quite simply:
Unplug the power supply and charger plug from your laptop
Restart your laptop
Connect your USB device to the laptop again
Plug the power supply back in
Method 3: Check your power management settings
In order to save power, by default, Windows switches your USB controllers off when they’re not in use, and switches them back on again when they’re needed. Unfortunately, sometimes this approach doesn’t work as intended, and Windows fails to switch your USB controllers on again.
To rule this out as the cause of your USB woes, just stop Windows from ‘managing’ power to your USB controllers and devices:
- Open Device Manager (type “Device Manager” in the Windows search field)
- Expand theUniversal Serial Bus controllers branch
- Double-click the first USB Root Hub device in the list (if you see only one USB Root Hub device, that’s fine)
- Title: Resolved: How Organizational Controls Impact Windows Configuration
- Author: Ronald
- Created at : 2024-08-22 19:13:54
- Updated at : 2024-08-23 19:13:54
- Link: https://common-error.techidaily.com/resolved-how-organizational-controls-impact-windows-configuration/
- License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.