While official support for Windows NT 4.0 ended in 2004, the enthusiast community continues to develop and archive drivers for both period-accurate and modern hardware:
: Natively, NT 4.0 does not support USB . Third-party "janky" drivers exist but are often considered unstable; mapping a network drive is often recommended as a safer alternative for file transfers.
: A notable third-party NVMe driver was recently developed by Techcommancer, allowing NT 4.0 to recognize modern NVMe drives like the Samsung PM981. It translates SCSI commands to NVMe.
Windows-nt-4.0-drivers.7z.002 -
While official support for Windows NT 4.0 ended in 2004, the enthusiast community continues to develop and archive drivers for both period-accurate and modern hardware:
: Natively, NT 4.0 does not support USB . Third-party "janky" drivers exist but are often considered unstable; mapping a network drive is often recommended as a safer alternative for file transfers. Windows-NT-4.0-drivers.7z.002
: A notable third-party NVMe driver was recently developed by Techcommancer, allowing NT 4.0 to recognize modern NVMe drives like the Samsung PM981. It translates SCSI commands to NVMe. While official support for Windows NT 4