It is not possible to produce a meaningful technical or purchasing report based solely on the query “usb device id vid 1e3d pid 198a best” because:
usb-ids or linux-usb.org) with a clear, consumer-friendly product name.Without confirmed product documentation, a formal report would be speculative. However, I can provide a draft advisory report that explains how to identify this device and what “best” likely means in context. usb device id vid 1e3d pid 198a best
lsusb -v -d 1e3d:198a to see class, subclass, protocol, manufacturer string, product string, and serial number fields.If you have installed the "best" drivers and nothing works, the device hardware itself may be the issue. It is not possible to produce a meaningful
You plug a little black rectangle into your laptop, watch the OS blink, and then — nothing recognizable. In Device Manager or lsusb it shows up as Vendor ID 1E3D, Product ID 198A. No friendly name, no obvious purpose. That puzzle — a tiny piece of hardware that refuses to introduce itself — is the kind of digital mystery that rewards curiosity. Here’s a guided, practical, and slightly playful feature on how to identify, probe, and (maybe) tame that anonymous USB device. Use the VID/PID in web searches
lsusb -v -d 1e3d:198aGet-PnpDevice | Where-Object $_.InstanceId -match 'VID_1E3D&PID_198A' system_profiler SPUSBDataType | grep -A5 "1e3d:198a"To: Requesting Party
From: Technical Analysis Unit
Date: [Current Date]
Subject: Identification and “Best Use” Assessment for VID_1E3D:PID_198A