What should I do if the Win10 update driver prompts timeout?

  
Every time you install a new system, you need to update the driver. Win10 is a brand new system, so you need to update the driver. When updating the driver, there will be some problems. The more common one is that the update driver has timed out. What should we do at this time?

First: Enter “gpedit.msc” in the Win10 system run window, and then click OK. In the open local Group Policy Editor, click on the left side of the "Group Policy" editor: Computer Configuration ——Administrative Templates——System——Device Installation. Then find the "Configure device installation timeout" on the right side.
Next: On the right side of the local Group Policy Editor, double-click the "Configure device installation timeout" option, then a dialog box will pop up, check the "Enable" option, and then in the value box below It can be advanced to 1800 seconds. Exit the Local Group Policy Editor after clicking the OK button. Then open the device manager and find the place with the yellow exclamation mark to update.
Then: in the pop-up window, select "Automatically search for updated driver software (S)", then search, download, and then install. The window where the device manager was installed flashed a few times, after which the original yellow small arrow disappeared, and the red small fork on the startup bar disappeared. At this point it is proved that the sound card driver is successful.
The above is the solution for the Win10 update driver timeout. Setting the time to half an hour is basically enough for the driver to be updated.
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