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mine is not a built-in adapter.its a USB adapter.Can that be a reason for it?
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I have no idea. I'm not going to repeat the bottom line for a third time.
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I have swapped out a dvd drive on an old pc, and the message is coming up that that the system has loaded the drivers but is unable to locate the drive.
Any suggestions?
(Other than screaming and beating the damn thing)
------------------------------------
Credit is a system whereby a person who can not pay gets another person who can not pay to guarantee that he can pay. - Charles Dickens
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Assuming the DVDROM worked in old pc, and did not have its own "special" drivers,
Try ...
Uninstall DVDROM from Device Manager, reboot and let windows find it again.
Motherboard BIOS set OK ?
DVDROM Jumpers set properly ?
IDE Cable round right way and NOT damaged ?
Power Supply cable - pins in plug not bent or poorly fitting ?
Can you try another DVDROM/CDROM and get same results ?
modified 1-Aug-19 21:02pm.
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Got it working now!
Did the uninstall/reboot, no joy.
Didn't touch the BIOS, as settings looked ok.
Jumper was set right.
Tried reversing the cable, no joy.
Power ok.
Couldn't try the other DVD drive as that was the broken ome I was replacing!
Then, enlightenment!
Off to the registry... delete the thresholds!
reboot and voila!
------------------------------------
Credit is a system whereby a person who can not pay gets another person who can not pay to guarantee that he can pay. - Charles Dickens
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I want to write such a driver for my cdrom:
1) When a specified disc(a encryped disc with some special information which can indicate that disc) injected in it and the user application want to read the disc, my driver will decrypt the content of the disc and return the decrypted content to the user application. Otherwise, my driver will transmit the io request to the default driver in the system.
How to implement such a driver?
2)Further more, if i want the user keep my specified application running to use the driver, in another word, only keep my appliction running can make the driver decrypted my disc or the io request would transmit to the default driver, should i have to create a exclusive mutex object in my user mode application so that my driver can chose the right action?
****edited******
I know, i should add this driver to the default driver which is present by the os. I found a driver implemented this. But it was surprising that, the driver simply called the IofCallDriver to deal most of the io request, only implemented IRP_MJ_POWER,IRP_MJ_DEVICE_CONTROL,IRP_MJ_INTERNAL_DEVICE_CONTROL, and IRP_MJ_PNP. But how it deal with what i want? Since it didn't do some its own task in IRP_MJ_READ, how did it hold the data readed from the disc?
Regards
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Hi Dears
I want a code to find and get HDD Serial Number without WMI in Windows XP with Framework 2 _ VS2005
Can anyone help me?
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Cute. You posted the exact same question in an article that shows you how to do it. Read the article and loko at the code same provided at the top and you'll have your answer.
BTW - spamming the entire site with the same question numerous times is considered very rude.
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Hi All,
Iam faced with this problem.
1. I have an application that should be capable of handling two usb mice. Let me elaborate.Two usb mice (or mice
like devices) will be connected to my system (windows xp) obviously through USB ports. I should be able to assign
or say that the mouse connected to this (one fixed) physical USB port is my left mouse and the mouse connected to
another (fixed one) USB port is my right mouse. Next, I should be able to distinguish between the events generated
by both the mice.
2. I have tried Raw Input Api whereby Iam able to distinguish between mice inputs. But Iam not able to fix my mice as
left and right. I tried to distinguish the mice using usb port ids. But whenever I plug out and reinsert my mouse,
the port id keeps changing (is this observation correct?). Also, for this requirement, I should be able to say
before hand what is the port number of my left mouse and my right mouse.
Any help on this would be highly appreciated.
Kamalesh Narayan Nair
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You're going to have to write your own driver.
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997 ----- "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001
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You posted this same question in visual c++/mfc. Where else have you been posting this same question, unaltered? >_>
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I am having a problem with mapping the USB Port of a USB Device to it's coresponding DirectSound Device. I am doing this in order to associate a specific USB Port with a specific DirectSound Device in order to get the FriendlyName for the DirectSound Device to associate with an audio control. I need to have specific knowledge of the USB Port in order to make sure the endpoint audio device is going to the correct user. I'm working in VS 2005.NET C# and hope this is possible. I've taken a look at the C# version of USBView, which gets you down to the USB Device, and I have also looked at DirectSoundEnumerator, which I can use to search the Interface string for the "USB" substring in order to select the DirectSound USB Audio Devices. From what I can see so far, there is no matching information coming from either side in order to map these two together. Does anyone have any way of doing this? Thanks in advance for any help, which is greatly appreciated.
GrizMan
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Here is a further update on what I have done:
I have a question about ParentIdPrefix. I am down at the device level for USB devices and I found the DriverKeyName by first setting up a SP_DEVINFO_DATA da = new SP_DEVINFO_DATA() structure and then calling SetupDiEnumDeviceInfo(h,i,ref da) and then using SetupDiGetDeviceRegistryProperty with SPDRP_DRIVER. Now I want to access the ParentIdPrefix at that level and compare it to the ParentIdPrefix I extract from the Interfaces ID string provided by DirectSound. In my code in which I have used the example from USBView to get to the USB Device level. I tried to get the ParentIdPrefix by using CM_Get_Parent with the da.DevInst value I have. The value I received (3042) does not represent the ParentIdPrefix value (string) (7&f4e88d5&0) I can see in the registry. I would like to get the value I see in the registry. Do you know how I would go about this?
Thanks in advance for your help.
GrizMan
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m using a bridge for encrypting my ethernet link. now i want to send traffic from one system to the other with 2 bridges between them one for encrypting, other for decrypting and want to check how much over head they are creating as in decrease in transfer speed (if any). how can i check that?
please refer to any 'free' software.
also
my LAN cards are 1Gbs in both PC's and both Bridges, would that be ok or should i use a better card in my PC's. and any other thing (e.g. LAN cable) that can create a bottle neck in my case that i need to know?
i appreciate ur help
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What kind of bridge encrypts data? A bridge is normally used to pass data from one physical media to another, or from one LAN topology to another, but I've never heard of one that encrypts data as it works.
In any case, the 1Gbps cards should be quite adequate - any overhead is going to be in the bridges and PCs themselves, unless the cable isn't up to par. Cabling can be a major bottleneck if its components and construction aren't matched to the data rate used. Cable terminations are particularly important, as if they aren't done right they will introduce reflections on the line (noise) and cause excessive NACK responses. When a NACK is received, the sender has to retransmit the data, reducing the effective data rate. At this data rate it probably doesn't pay to try to do the terminations in the field; 100BaseT is hard enough to do properly. Investing in top quality cables is money well spent, generally.
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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I turned on my computer this morning, and just got a blank screen. (The monitor says "no input signal", and then goes into standby).
There are no warning beeps or anything. I can't remember if it used to beep or not after the POST was completed. Now it's just silent.
The hard drive spins up, and seems to be accessed.
I've tried resetting the BIOS by swapping the jumper over, waiting 10 seconds, and then back again.
I've tested it with a different monitor to check it's not a monitor fault.
The motherboard has on-board graphics (Geforce 6100)
It's a Biostar - IDEQ 250N[^], with an AMD Athlon 64 X2 4200.
Does anyone have any idea what the problem could be, or suggestions for what I can do to diagnose it.
Simon
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Well, this is obviously going to be a hardware failure of some kind. Swap out the power supply, and if that doesn't do it, swap the CPU, and if that doesn't do it either, swap the RAM, then the entire motherboard.
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Dave Kreskowiak wrote: Swap out the power supply, and if that doesn't do it, swap the CPU, and if that doesn't do it either, swap the RAM, then the entire motherboard.
Cheers. That's in order of how much I hope it fixes the problem. I really don't want to go through the process of buying and swapping the motherboard.
Thanks though.
Simon
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Something wrong with the motherboard's onboard graphics perhaps?
"The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer
"Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon
"Not only do you continue to babble nonsense, you can't even correctly remember the nonsense you babbled just minutes ago." - Rob Graham
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Paul Conrad wrote: Something wrong with the motherboard's onboard graphics perhaps?
Potentially. It was my first thought. But any idea how I can tell? With no output I don't even know if it's booting up or not. I've reset the bios, so it's not an incorrect setting issue. I have tried a spare graphics card, and it doesn't work, but IIRC you had to change the bios settings to use a graphics card, which I can't do.
Cheers
Simon
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Or, try to make a safe problem, which BIOS would normally beep about, like remove all the RAM. If the computer starts beeping then you know that BIOS, CPU, PSU are probably OK. If not the Motherboard/CPU/BIOS/PSU is damaged. If you have a loose PSU lying around then test that first, since you can just unplug the wires from the old one, and let the new one site outside. If that's not the problem look at the Motherboard/CPU. Note that in my experience these parts very rarely break (it's never happened to me at least...)
Hope you solve your problem.
//Johannes
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Johpoke wrote: Or, try to make a safe problem, which BIOS would normally beep about, like remove all the RAM.
Nice idea, thanks. Tried it, still no beeping.
I do have a spare PSU (well, when I say spare, I mean the one in my wife's computer. I'll have to wait till she's not looking to try that out ).
Lights do come on, and the drives all spin up, so the PSU is at least partly working.
Thanks.
Simon
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Simon Stevens wrote: Lights do come on, and the drives all spin up, so the PSU is at least partly working.
You might get good power from the power supply, but that doesn't mean it's raising the PowerGood signal to the motherboard, so you may still have a bad power supply.
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Hmm, still hard to to tell whats wrong. As dave says the PSU might be faulty, as HDDs only need +5 and +12v while the motherboard will need some other voltages too. Does your computer have a high-end or good quality PSU? Or some no-name (like POWER MAN)? I always try testing the easist first, too bad you dont have any PSU thats not in a computer... If PSU is not the problem then it's probably the motherboard or the CPU. CPU Overheated maybe? Fan full of dust? Or fan out of oil? (= it stops) Sometimes (yet very rarely) removing all components and putting them back in can help. (But if it has been going fine for ages and is not home built this will probably not help)
Some newer computers don't have BIOS speakers installed (and some have them installed on the motherboard), So if yours doesnt have any, install one.
//Johannes
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Whats your time worth? If its upwards of 40 dollars an hour just buy a new box with new motherboard, RAM, CPU and PSU. Put you old HDD in and away you go.
Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription
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