Original title: I am receiving a Code 10 error stating Microsoft WPD FileSystem Volume Driver. I have deleted it and restarted my computer. I read and printed the HotFix, I am having a problem getting. PC Pitstop / Driver Library / / Microsoft WPD FileSystem Volume Driver. Updating your drivers with Driver Alert. Features for a device that may not. Download the latest drivers for your Microsoft WPD FileSystem Volume Driver to keep your Computer up-to-date.
WPD Drivers • • 2 minutes to read • Contributors • • In this article Microsoft Windows Portable Devices (WPD) enable computers to communicate with attached media and storage devices. This system supersedes both Windows Media Device Manager (WMDM) and Windows Image Acquisition (WIA) by providing a flexible, robust way for a computer to communicate with music players, storage devices, mobile phones, and many other types of connected devices. Microsoft provides several drivers for standard protocols and devices, including Picture Transfer Protocol (PTP), Media Transfer Protocol (MTP) devices, and Mass Storage Class (MSC) devices. If your device supports a unique protocol, you might need to develop your own driver. Use the User-Mode Driver Framework (UMDF) to write this driver. For more information about this framework, see. For more information about applications that are written for Windows Portable Devices, see the.
For more information about both WPD driver development and WPD application development, see the, which is accurate for Windows 10.
I have Vista Premium on an ACER T180 machine. I recently noticed the exclamation point next to the WPD FileSystem Volume Driver under Device Manager. When I double click on it, the error code is: This device cannot start. (Code 10) Click 'Check for solutions' to send data about this device to Microsoft and to see if there is a solution available. I have uninstalled the device several times. I followed the directions for modifiying the registry in KB314060 (even though this isn't for a CD/DVD problem.) The device in question is the card reader that came installed in the PC.
If I put an SD card into the reader, it freezes Windows Explorer until I remove it. The USB port on the card reader seems to work when I plug things into it. I noticed this problem when I tried to connect my brand new camera to the machine.
It also is getting the same error code. I'm guessing that the two are being caused by the same problem, so if I solve one, hopefully the other one will be solved too. Any ideas on what could resolve this issue? Thanks in advance for any help you could give me. It may possible be becuase you are using a mircosoft driver instead of the manufactures driver. Microsoft would have written the driver for generic devices so would work 9 times out of 10 looks like your the unlucky one, I would always recommend using the manufactures drivers as they are written specifically for your hardware. However I have looked on the acer website for them and in google but can only find an xp driver for the card reader you can try it, it may not work but is worth a go.
If this doesnt work then go to and download all the drivers and install them over the old drivers in device manager the ati one should be a chipset driver which may solve the problem. You could always email acer support and ask them when they will release a vista driver they may even have a beta driver which you could use. System: I'm currently running Vista Home Premium 32 bit with a HP a6130n desktop computer. Issue: WPD FileSystem Volume driver software. Properties status shows 'This device cannot start.
(Code 10)' symptoms: install WPD FileSystem Volume driver software after every login The issue is the same although i noticed one of the card readers were missing under computer folder. Instructions are as follows: 1. Right click computer under the start tab and select manage 2. Click on the Device manager tab. You will see the! In 'WPD FileSystem Volume driver software.' Click on Disk drives and disable each one until the WPD FileSystem disappears.
Reinable all the drives then right click the problem drive and select properties. Click on the volumes tab then select 'populate' then note down what Disk number the populate assigned it. Go back to the Computer Management window. On the left side is a folder called Disk Management(under the Storage folder). Select Disk Management. At the bottom is a list of disks. Right click the disk number you populated for the problem drive and select 'Change drive letter and paths.'
Assign the drive letter and go back to the Device Manager. Problem gone. Reassigning Drive letters solved my problem - thanks! A quick description on how I found myself with WPD FileSystem trouble just so someone else may recognize the situation: I normally keep -lots- of partition letters around, currently C: through O: with Z: as my DVD-R.