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The Old New Thing

Speculating on how the buggy control panel extension truncated a value that it had right in front of it - The Old New Thing The case of the invalid function pointer when shutting down the display control panel - The Old New Thing Microspeak: Double-click and drill down - The Old New Thing Why don't we just make the entire stack out of guard pages? - The Old New Thing The case of the mysterious changes to integers when there shouldn't have been any code generation effect - The Old New Thing I've decoded a #pragma detect_mismatch error and fixed the mismatch, but I still get the error - The Old New Thing The other kind of control flow guard check: The combined validate and call - The Old New Thing How did Windows 95 decide that a setup program ran? - The Old New Thing I opened a file with FILE_FLAG_DELETE_ON_CLOSE, but now I changed my mind - The Old New Thing How did we conclude that CcNamespace.dll was the ringleader of a group of DLLs that unloaded prematurely? - The Old New Thing The case of the thread executing from an unloaded third-party DLL - The Old New Thing It rather involved being on the other side of this airtight hatchway: Changing administrative settings - The Old New Thing 2026 mid-year link clearance - The Old New Thing A compatibility note on the abuse of Windows window class extra bytes - The Old New Thing The evolution of window and class extra bytes in Windows - The Old New Thing The case of the DLL that was not present in memory despite not being formally unloaded, part 2 - The Old New Thing Raymond's hot take on Hainanese chicken - The Old New Thing The case of the DLL that was not present in memory despite not being formally unloaded, part 1 - The Old New Thing Cancellation of Windows Runtime activities is asynchronous - The Old New Thing Microspeak elaborated: Isn't escrow just a release candidate by another name? - The Old New Thing In memory of the man who put red and green squiggles under words - The Old New Thing What does it mean when the bottom bit of my HMODULE is set? - The Old New Thing Why doesn't Get­Last­Input­Info() return info for the user I'm impersonating? - The Old New Thing Windows stack limit checking retrospective, follow-up - The Old New Thing Retrofitting the WM_COPY­DATA message onto Windows 3.1 - The Old New Thing The time the x86 emulator team found code so bad that they fixed it during emulation - The Old New Thing How can I schedule work on a thread pool with low latency? Understanding the rationale behind a rule when trying to circumvent it What’s the opposite of Clip­Cursor that lets me exclude the cursor from a region? The Microsoft Company Party where everybody played name tag swap Rotation revisited: Shuffling more than three blocks, and other small notes The back cover of C++: The Programming Language also raises questions not answered by the front cover Rotation revisited: Avoiding having to calculate the gcd when doing cycle decomposition Rotation revisited: Cycle decomposition in clang’s libcxx Rotation revisited: A shocking discovery about gcc’s unidirectional rotation algorithm Rotation revisited: Another unidirectional algorithm The placeholder name for the Windows 8 experience was “modern” Sharing the result of a single Windows Runtime IAsyncOperation among multiple coroutines, part 3 Sharing the result of a single Windows Runtime IAsyncOperation among multiple coroutines, part 2 Sharing the result of a single Windows Runtime IAsyncOperation among multiple coroutines, part 1 If C# and JavaScript lets me await a Windows Runtime asynchronous operation more than once, why not C++/WinRT? A hypothetical redesign of System.Diagnostics.Process to avoid confusion over properties that are valid only when you are the one who called Start Why do you say that a COM STA thread must pump messages if I see sample code creating STA threads and not pumping messages? How do I use Win32 structures from the Windows Runtime? What is the history of the ERROR_ARENA_TRASHED error code? The classic TreeView control lets me sort by name or by lParam, but why not both? Just shows that nobody cares about debugging the parity flag any more The case of the Create­File­Mapping that always reported ERROR_ALREADY_EXISTS
Why has the display control panel pointer truncation bug gone unfixed for so long? - The Old New Thing
Raymond Chen · 2026-07-17 · via The Old New Thing

Last time, we speculated on how the buggy control panel extension truncated a value that it had right in front of it. When we sent our analysis to the vendor, they wrote back, “Can you check the driver version numbers on these crashes?”

When we checked the driver version numbers on all the crashing systems, they were something like “build 314”, when the current driver build number is something like “build 2718”. These users are running drivers that are ridiculously old! The vendor fixed that bug ages ago, but the user hasn’t gotten the fix. What’s going on?

My theory was that these users have turned off Windows Update or are otherwise declining to upgrade their video drivers. But I learned that my theory was probably wrong.

The deal here is that these are video drivers, which are a category of drivers where computer manufacturers have a lot of control. The manufacturer certifies the drivers for use on their PCs after performing their own acceptance testing on their specific hardware configurations. (Which are probably not hardware configurations that the video card vendors themselves are aware of.)

This responsibility carries forward post-sale. The computer manufacturer remains responsible for certifying driver updates, presumably by testing them against reference PCs that they maintain in their labs. Sometimes, manufacturers get customized versions of the video cards (all the better to differentiate your product with, my dear), which is why the video card vendor “driver downloads” sites often warn you to check with your computer manufacturer before installing a driver.

In practice, computer manufacturers are diligent about certifying drivers for a year, year and a half, two years tops.¹ After that, it’s not uncommon for them to abandon that model and not bother certifying drivers for it any more. All customers with that model of PC are just stuck with whatever video drivers were current as of the time the manufacturer stopped certifying drivers.

Microsoft maintains generic drivers for many classes of hardware, but intentionally sets them as low priority so that the PC manufacturer-provided drivers take precedence. The video drivers received directly from video card manufacturers are similarly deprioritized by the video card vendors. The computer manufacturer-certified drivers take precedence, even if that certification is horribly out of date.

¹ I wouldn’t be surprised if the length of time they certify drivers is somehow correlated with the length of the computer warranty.

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Raymond Chen

Raymond has been involved in the evolution of Windows for more than 30 years. In 2003, he began a Web site known as The Old New Thing which has grown in popularity far beyond his wildest imagination, a development which still gives him the heebie-jeebies. The Web site spawned a book, coincidentally also titled The Old New Thing (Addison Wesley 2007). He occasionally appears on the Windows Dev Docs Twitter account to tell stories which convey no useful information.