Installing the EZP2010 High-Speed Programmer on Windows 10 requires a specific workaround because the device lacks officially signed drivers for modern 64-bit operating systems. To successfully install it, you must temporarily disable Driver Signature Enforcement Step 1: Disable Driver Signature Enforcement

Because the official Ezp2010 driver is not signed by Microsoft, you must disable DSE.

To use the EZP2010 programmer with Windows 10, you need to install a driver that allows the operating system to recognize the device and communicate with it. The driver acts as a bridge between the programmer and the computer, enabling you to program and flash firmware on your devices.

There isn't a single official website for the Ezp2010, but the drivers are widely available through electronics forums and repositories.

EZP2010 (also written EZP-2010) is a low-cost EEPROM/flash programmer used for BIOS chips and other SPI/I2C serial memory. Official driver support for Windows 10 is limited; users typically rely on community-provided drivers and procedures to get the device recognized and working. Below is a concise, practical guide covering drivers, installation steps, troubleshooting, and safety notes.

Once the driver is installed, you need compatible software to test the programmer. The most popular are:

Windows 10 security settings prevent the installation of unsigned drivers by default. Use these steps to bypass this: Start menu and select (gear icon). Navigate to Update & Security Advanced startup Restart now Once the PC restarts into the blue menu, select: Troubleshoot Advanced options Startup Settings

If Windows tells you the hash for the file is not present or the driver is unsigned, you must disable driver signature enforcement temporarily.