I had put my email address on a list to get any info about this problem and received this response today. ************ Hi Everyone, Caleb from Coolgear here with an update regarding Windows 10 drivers for your infrared adapters. Unfortunately the news isn't good. Our supplier is telling us that they are being stonewalled by Microsoft regarding the changes made in Windows 10 and how to update the driver package. I've also heard from Asix (formerly Moschip), the chip manufacture used in most adapters, that they are also getting similar lack of support from Microsoft regarding this issue. All we can recommend at this time is that if using your infrared adapter is important to you, do not upgrade to Windows 10, or keep an older PC around to sync your equipment with. For the more technically inclined among you, a virtual machine using VMWare Player or Oracle VirtualBox is also a solution.
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I would also recommend that you continue to make some noise on the official MicroSoft forums and elsewhere about the issue. Maybe with some pressure from the public Microsoft will at least acknowledge the problem and work towards resolving it. IrDA is an old technology and rarely used today, but surely this is not a reason to remove support for it!Yes, IrDA is an old technology, but less than half the age of the hardware keyboard. Both have a rapidly diminishing user base, but the core user base of the hardware keyboard includes software engineers, and this is therefore safe for the foreseeable future. The core user base of the IrDA computer interface is not small, but is engaged in physical activities, particularly underwater activities and sports training, a sphere of activity which is largely closed to desk-bound Microsoft operating system engineers and salesmen, so folk who need to upload their dive computer or heart rate/bp logger data to a computer database may have to migrate to Apple when they update their computer systems, unless someone creates a third-party workaround, which has unfortunately proved to be a non-trivial undertaking. It may be that the new ultra-low power Bluetooth technologies may become practical to replace IrDA in these devices at some time in the future, but it would take another 5 - 10 years to phase out IrDA in dive computers. Just wondering, can't one just copy the relevant driver files (INF, DLLs) from a Windows 7 or 8.1 installation and try to manually install then through the Device Manager?
For each unknown device relative to the IrDA controller, just browse to the folder that contains all the files and hopefully you will finally manage to make it work. I would install Windows 7 or 8.1 in another disk, or virtual machine and then find out (from device properties) which are the relevant files. Radmin server 3.5 no tray icon. I would simply copy them in a folder and try them in Windows 10. Might and magic 10.