Example command (run as Administrator):
Therefore, oem69.inf is simply the 69th (or thereabouts, depending on the system's history) third-party driver package installed on that specific machine.
If you see gibberish, binary data, or references to unusual registry keys like HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunOnce without a driver context, consider it suspicious.
Type the following command and hit Enter: pnputil /enum-drivers
If you are receiving errors pointing to oem69.inf, you can manage it using the built-in PnPUtil tool :
Example command (run as Administrator):
Therefore, oem69.inf is simply the 69th (or thereabouts, depending on the system's history) third-party driver package installed on that specific machine.
If you see gibberish, binary data, or references to unusual registry keys like HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunOnce without a driver context, consider it suspicious.
Type the following command and hit Enter: pnputil /enum-drivers
If you are receiving errors pointing to oem69.inf, you can manage it using the built-in PnPUtil tool :