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The USB 3.0 is supported by Windows 7 with the latest updates and service package installed. However, you will also need to consider to check your machine, if its hardware and BIOS is compatible with the USB 3.0. In the BIOS, there should be an option that will let your machine work with USB 3.0s.
You can download the Intel USB 3.0 driver for Windows 7 right here. If you need this driver for Windows XP, Vista or Windows 8 please read the notes below. The Intel USB 3.0 eXtensible Host Controller Driver Installer "Setup.exe" will install the following drivers and application on the system:
This package installs the software (USB 3.0 driver) to enable the following devices: Note: If this package has been installed, updating (overwrite-installing) this package will fix problems, add new functions, or expand functions as noted below.
In this article, we will show you how to manually integrate USB drivers into the Windows 7 installation image without using third-party utilities.
There are working USB drivers on sites like win-raid.com and the Gigabyte Utility website. I first used Intel® drivers from win-raid.com and 7Updater to update my USB installation drive. Then I used Gigabyte's Windows USB Tool to add NVMe drivers and a few hotfixes to the installer. This did it.
Windows 7 installation media doesn't include native driver support for USB 3.0. When installing Windows 7, on the screen to select your preferred language, a keyboard or mouse connected to a USB 3.0 port doesn't respond. Any Intel® NUC that has only USB 3.0 ports is affected.
Windows operating systems automatically apply a generic driver that allows users to transfer files using the USB (Universal Serial Bus) port; however, installing the appropriate software can bring about significant changes.
If you try to install Windows 7 on a device which comes only with USB 3.0 ports, you might face issues such as non-operational USB keyboard and mouse in the Setup program. While your keyboard and mouse work in the BIOS, they stop responding once Windows 7 Setup starts.
Windows 7 doesn't include generic USB 3.0 drivers, so you'll need to provide those if you use a USB 3.0 port, even if you're using just a USB 2.0 stick. I followed this solution which I gathered from various sources. I assume an understanding of Windows and the command line. Prerequisites
The Windows 7 RTM distribution doesn't support USB 3.0 out-of-the-box, and you can encounter some problems with the installation of Windows 7 on a computer/laptop having USB 3.0 ports only (most modern devices released after 2015 have only USB3 ports).