Oem61.inf

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oem61.inf

Oem61.inf

[1] HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE,SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Svchost, "OEMService", 0, 0

oem61.inf is likely used in the following scenarios:

Use the PnPUtil tool by typing pnputil /enum-drivers . This will list all third-party drivers, showing the "Published Name" (e.g., oem61.inf) alongside the "Original Name" and the "Provider Name" (e.g., Realtek, Intel, or HP).

If you are browsing your Windows system folders or using a driver cleaning tool, you may have stumbled across a file named oem61.inf (or similar files named oem##.inf ). Because of the generic name, it is often unclear what this file does or if it belongs to a critical system component.

Would you like a step-by-step guide to safely identify and, if needed, remove this specific driver from your system?

Note: Opening .inf files directly may show garbled binary sections if digitally signed with embedded hashes, but most are plain text.

The name is not specific to a single piece of hardware; rather, it is a used by Windows. When you install a third-party driver (for a graphics card, printer, mouse, or specialized software), Windows copies the driver files into a repository known as the Driver Store .

oem61.inf

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[1] HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE,SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Svchost, "OEMService", 0, 0

oem61.inf is likely used in the following scenarios:

Use the PnPUtil tool by typing pnputil /enum-drivers . This will list all third-party drivers, showing the "Published Name" (e.g., oem61.inf) alongside the "Original Name" and the "Provider Name" (e.g., Realtek, Intel, or HP).

If you are browsing your Windows system folders or using a driver cleaning tool, you may have stumbled across a file named oem61.inf (or similar files named oem##.inf ). Because of the generic name, it is often unclear what this file does or if it belongs to a critical system component.

Would you like a step-by-step guide to safely identify and, if needed, remove this specific driver from your system?

Note: Opening .inf files directly may show garbled binary sections if digitally signed with embedded hashes, but most are plain text.

The name is not specific to a single piece of hardware; rather, it is a used by Windows. When you install a third-party driver (for a graphics card, printer, mouse, or specialized software), Windows copies the driver files into a repository known as the Driver Store .