Enter E-20mp Webcam Driver [exclusive] Instant
The year was 2008, and the " Enter E-20MP" webcam Go to product viewer dialog for this item.
sat perched atop a chunky CRT monitor like a cyclopean eye. Its owner, Leo, had just brought it home in a box covered in exuberant claims of "Interpolated 20 Megapixels!"—a technical miracle for a device that cost less than a pizza.
Leo slid the mini-CD into his computer. The drive whirred like a jet engine, and the installer for the E-20MP Driver Go to product viewer dialog for this item.
flickered to life with a pixelated UI. With a few clicks, the driver handshake was complete. The tiny green LED on the webcam glowed, and suddenly, Leo’s face appeared on the screen—laggy, slightly purple-tinted, and glorious. enter e-20mp webcam driver
That webcam and its faithful driver became the window to his world. Through that lens:
He braved the lag of early Skype calls, where his voice and video were perpetually three seconds out of sync, leading to conversations that felt like communicating with Mars.
He recorded his first "vlog" for a fledgling site called YouTube, the driver struggling to keep up with his hand gestures, creating a ghostly motion blur that he thought looked "artistic." The year was 2008, and the " Enter
He stayed connected with a best friend who moved across the country, the E-20MP turning a grainy basement into a shared hangout spot where they played World of Warcraft until dawn. Years passed. The Go to product viewer dialog for this item.
was eventually replaced by 4K sensors and built-in laptop cameras that didn't require manual driver installations. Leo found the old webcam in a junk drawer recently. He plugged it in just for fun. His modern OS didn't recognize it—the old driver was a relic of a 32-bit era long gone.
But for a moment, looking at the plastic lens, he didn't see a piece of obsolete tech. He saw the grainy, purple-tinted face of a teenager who was just starting to discover that the whole world was only a driver installation away. Troubleshooting: Still Not Working
Troubleshooting: Still Not Working?
If the driver installs but the camera remains broken:
- Try a different USB port: Use a USB 2.0 port (black plastic inside) rather than USB 3.0 (blue). Some generic cameras have compatibility issues with 3.0.
- Check your privacy settings (Windows 10/11): Go to Settings > Privacy & security > Camera and ensure "Camera access" is On.
- Close competing apps: Only one app can use the webcam at a time. Close Zoom, Teams, Chrome, or OBS before testing.
- Test with a simple app: Use the free "Camera" app built into Windows to verify the feed.
6.3 Reducing CPU Usage
The E-20MP uses MJPEG compression by default. To lower CPU usage:
- In OBS/Streamlabs, change video format to YUY2 (if supported) or reduce output resolution to 1280x720.
Method B: Manual via Device Manager (For .inf files)
- Unzip the driver folder to your Desktop.
- Open Device Manager.
- Look for the Enter E-20MP device (it may show as "Unknown device" with a yellow exclamation mark).
- Right-click and select Update driver.
- Choose Browse my computer for drivers.
- Click Browse and navigate to the unzipped folder.
- Check Include subfolders and click Next.
- Windows will install the driver. Click Close.
3. Download from a generic driver repository (last resort)
Use only if you cannot identify the brand. Be cautious of adware.
- Older systems (Windows 7/8): Try
DriverPack Solutionoffline (uncheck extra software) or search forUSB2.0 PC Camera driver .inf - Specific chipset: Many E-20MP cameras use the Sonix SN9C280 or Generalplus chip. Search for: Sonix SN9C280 driver Windows 10
⚠️ Avoid "driver updater" popups from unknown websites. Stick to GitHub, Microsoft Catalog, or the chip maker's site.