When your USB stack is on fire, you don't need glitter. You need raw, unfiltered data. USBTreeView delivers that data directly to your clipboard.
We live in a plugged-in world. For the average user, a USB port is a simple black hole: you plug in a mouse, it works. You plug in a flash drive, a folder pops up. usbtreeview
But for developers, hardware engineers, and IT troubleshooters, USB is a complex hierarchy of hubs, controllers, endpoints, and power budgets. When Windows’ built-in Device Manager feels like a blindfold, where do you turn? When your USB stack is on fire, you don't need glitter
Do you use USBTreeView for debugging hardware? Let me know your favorite use case in the comments below! We live in a plugged-in world
You turn to . What is USBTreeView? Originally known as USBView (part of the Windows Driver Kit), USBTreeView is an open-source, standalone utility that does one thing brilliantly: it shows you the complete, raw, tree structure of every USB device connected to your machine.