Devices: The Basics

These key features (and related benefits) result from the Windows 95 system design changes (as described in Chapter 18, "Introduction to System Configuration"):

Windows 95 includes several tools to help install, configure, and manage hardware devices:

For other devices, Windows 95 provides installation and configuration wizards. For example, you use wizards to install modems, faxes, printers, multimedia, and sound devices. For information about using these specific tools, see related chapters in this book.

This section summarizes improvements in support for these device types:

Improved display adapter and monitor support.

Windows 95 Setup automatically detects the display adapter and installs the appropriate display driver. The Windows 95 display drivers are stringently tested to ensure greater reliability and stability than drivers for Windows 3.1.

Also, Windows 95 includes mechanisms to ensure that bad or incompatible display drivers cannot keep you from starting and using the system. If a display driver fails to load or initialize when Windows 95 is started, Windows 95 uses the generic VGA display driver. Benefits of the new display driver support in Windows 95 include the following:

Windows 95 includes drivers for nearly all popular graphics accelerators, and has been shown to run faster than Windows 3.1 on the following models and chip sets:

ATI Technologies Inc.

COMPAQ QVision

Tseng Labs

Cirrus Logic

IBM XGA

Western Digital

Chips & Technologies

Matrox MGA


The graphics accelerators in the preceding list are installed on numerous computers and retail graphics adapters and sold under many different make and model names. Before purchasing a new computer or graphics accelerator card, we recommend that you know what graphics accelerator it uses and whether it is supported by Windows 95 drivers developed by Microsoft or another manufacturer. Other accelerator and adapter manufacturers not included in this list will have drivers available.

Improved mouse and pointing device support.

As with other device drivers, the mini-driver architecture of Windows 95 simplifies mouse driver development and improves virtualization in a protected-mode mouse driver to better support MS-DOS – based applications in the Windows environment. Windows 95 includes the following improvements to mouse support over Windows 3.1:

Improved communications hardware support.

Windows 95 provides improved communications device and hardware support over Windows 3.1. A few areas of improvement include the following:

Improved power management support.

Microsoft worked with Intel to develop an industry standard for Advanced Power Management (APM). Now most major computer manufacturers of both portable and desktop computers widely support the APM specification. Windows 95 includes an APM driver that sends messages to the computer's BIOS to manage such things as conserving power during idle periods, reducing monitor power consumption, and processing suspend and resume requests on computers with such features. For information about enabling APM if it was disabled during Setup, see "Troubleshooting Device Configuration" later in this chapter.