Usb Camera-b4.09.24.1 Driver ●
The device ID USB\VID_05A9&PID_0580 (commonly listed in Device Manager as USB Camera-B4.09.24.1) typically refers to an older internal webcam hardware model. This hardware was widely used in laptops, particularly older Dell Latitude and Inspiron series notebooks, manufactured roughly between 2007 and 2010.
The manufacturer of the imaging chip is OmniVision Technologies, a leading developer of advanced digital imaging solutions. The specific model is usually the OmniVision OV2640 sensor.
The driver stack for this device is layered. The "USB Camera-B4.09.24.1" does not operate as a standalone .sys file but functions within the Windows Media and Streaming architecture.
Overview
The B4.09.24.1 driver package is a device driver release used for certain USB camera modules and webcams. Drivers like this provide the operating system with the necessary interface to identify the camera, initialize hardware, manage power states, stream video data, and expose controls (resolution, frame rate, exposure, etc.) to applications.
Typical contents of a B4.09.24.1 driver package usb camera-b4.09.24.1 driver
Common features and capabilities
Installation (Windows — typical procedure)
Installation (Linux — typical steps)
Troubleshooting
Security and safety
Version notes and changelog (what to look for)
Compatibility considerations
How to verify the installed version
When to contact vendor support
If you need
Related search suggestions (terms you can use next)
Most modern OSes (Win10/11, Linux, macOS) have built-in UVC drivers that replace proprietary ones like this. USB Hub Driver: Manages the physical connection and
The identifier "b4.09.24.1" seems to be a device ID or a part of it, which could help in identifying the device. Typically, device IDs are in the format of VID_XXXX&PID_XXXX, where VID is the Vendor ID and PID is the Product ID. However, without the full ID or more context, directly providing a driver is challenging.
The B4.09.24.1 device communicates via the UVC protocol (USB Class Code 0x0E). This protocol defines two primary interfaces: