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Double Driver backs up and restores vendor-specific drivers

Whether you are reinstalling Windows on your machine or just have a bad driver update, Double Driver can save your bacon.
I recently applied an ATI driver update through FileHippo, which is usually a no-brainer.  In this case, however, either ATI or FileHippo messed up and my machine booted to a black screen.  While I had to reinstall the old drivers through Windows Safe Mode, I was wishing I had used Double Driver.
I also plan to use it to back up the old drivers from an install before reinstalling Windows.  You can use Double Driver to both back up as well as restore the drivers for your particular system.  For example, even if I’ve been good about keeping all of my laptop’s original driver zip files from the manufacturer’s downloads, there’s a lot to keep track of.  Do I remember which of the arcanely named files contains which driver?  Which ones did I really need versus which were optional?  Which ones installed annoying applications that take over during startup?  Where are the CDs for the extra peripherals I’ve added?
While you still may want to remember which of those annoying applets you want to install (DD won’t do that for you), you can be sure you have the right drivers and just the drivers within a few moments of running it.
The way it works is to, like the device manager, list all the devices on your system.  It automatically knows which ones are Microsoft-supplied.  The default backup behavior is to extract all of the non-Microsoft (so presumably, the ones you had to supply) drivers to the directory of your choosing.  One button (and a directory selection) backs them up, and one button restores them.  Simple.
I don’t plan on formatting home without it.