arghh,
I hope that's true.. date being part of version weighing.
BUT, I doubt it is true.
I remember there were several drivers (ermm.. soundmaxx came to mind), that had newer date for older versions.
The good part about those is that, when I worked through the lot I wound up with about ten very questionable HWIDs across several drivers, and still later on, a driver was found which left me with only ONE questionable, so I quite literally dumped that single HWID and the other were supported by a better so got dumped as well.
Old changelogs tell you when folders got dumped.
In those days, we had poor scanner tool.
I am very pleased that people still want to improve the tools we can use, and my comments about the date 'thing' are to be taken at face value.
(well, you would not have those drivers to scan, because they are no longer there.. somebody with old DriverPacks from 2005, 2006, 2007, could provide a scannable driver repertoire for scanner-testing.)
(edit; proof of concept, newer date/old version. Consider this, realtek will add a single HWID to ONE INF, and internally updates ALL systemfile to datematch, ALL 100 or so INF to same date (while the majority have no machine code rewritten.. They were altered to match. Some Driver vendors did NOT alter systemfile version to match INF date. They tagged an edit date, or they tagged a minor version change in INF only, and the machine code was unadjusted, the sysfile not-edited to match INF. Those are hard calls. One can use araxis and -in extremis- hexcompare for proof of concept). At DriverPacks we do not use The Driver developement Kit, but
Last edited by Jaak (2009-02-27 13:43:39)
The answer was 42?
Kind regards, Jaak.