|
Pick one forum and stick with that forum please.
|
|
|
|
|
Hi Sorry I reposted because I found that I did the first in the wrong place
|
|
|
|
|
So lately I'm having a weird problem with my USB ports. I'll try to explain.
I keep hearing that sound like someone's putting in a flash drive & removing it. Over & over & over. Also, when I look in Windows Explorer, I see a number of "Removable Drives". They must be some kind of virtual drive because I certainly don't have that many pysical drives. They were there when I bought the PC.
At any rate, this problem isn't happening all the time. It just randomly starts. When it's happening, the list of drives in Windows Explorer disappears and reappears at a fast rate in sync with the sound I described.
This is a fairly new PC, and I use AVG and Malware Bytes and scan regularly.
I have a wireless keyboard & mouse, a wireless headset, a printer, and 2 monitors plugged into the USB ports.
I have no clue how to figure out what's wrong. Any hardware people wanna point me in the right direction.
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
|
|
|
|
|
I'm not a hardware-person, but.. if you open the "properties" screen of "my computer", go to "Advanced settings", then to the "Hardware" tab and press the button "Device manager" (or somthing similar, using a silly localized/non English version of Windows atm), you'd launch an app that shows a tree with all the hardware. Try to find the USB-node, and see if Windows tries adding a piece of hardware - there'd be a node appearing and disappearing in sync with the sound.
If you do find one, disable it.
If that fails, download TweakUI and disable every drive that you're not currently using.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
|
|
|
|
|
Does your computer have a media card reader? If so, that's probably where all those drives are coming from. Each one of those card types has an allocated virtual drive to load to.
Now, to get to your actual problem, it sounds like you're having a problem with some USB peripheral, the drives appearing and disappearing is probably just a symptom of the real problem (i.e. it keeps trying to refresh). The problem can really be anything USB (including your keyboard or mouse) or even one of the USB chips that's malfunctioning (or the power to it is dropping below whatever is it's minimum).
To troubleshoot:
- Disconnect ALL external USB items and see if problem appears.
- Try to find old style keyboard and mouse to drive.
- Disable the media card reader on the device manager if there.
- Start in safe mode and see if problem occurs there.
- If problem still persists... you'll need more experienced help (need to check voltage levels to USB chips, may be problem with motherboard or powersupply... more likely motherboard since the power to the chips should be going through a regulator on the motherboard).
|
|
|
|
|
Thanks, I'll try all this
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
|
|
|
|
|
Hi, I have a sample OSR USB board and I have written a sample driver for this USB board.
I have built this driver and able to install.
But I am not able to debug this driver using Windbg since it is kernel driver.
OS: Win7
#include ntddk.h
DRIVER_UNLOAD DriverUnload;
void DriverUnload(PDRIVER_OBJECT pDriverObject)
{
DbgPrint("Driver Unload\n");
}
NTSTATUS DriverEntry(PDRIVER_OBJECT pDriverObject, PUNICODE_STRING pRegistryPath)
{
pDriverObject->DriverUnload = DriverUnload;
DbgPrint("Driver Entry : Hello Windows Device Driver World!\n");
return STATUS_SUCCESS;
}
Can anybody help me in debugging my driver?
|
|
|
|
|
In system config on the target you need to enable kernel debug specifying firewire of serial.
Hook the target to the host with tht relevant cable.
Turn off the target.
Run windbg on the host and set it to kernel debug on the relevant interface (firewire or serial).
Restart the target and it should connect and you will see a lot of debug data.
You then set the path in windbg for the symbols and code for your driver (and use the global microsoft symbol server for their code, search in help for symsrv), then you can set breakpoints and step through your code.
==============================
Nothing to say.
|
|
|
|
|
So you are a supposedly Senior Software developer, yet you cant read simple documentation, for which there is plenty available, and then, when I give you the answer you dont ever bother responding.
What a joke you are!
==============================
Nothing to say.
|
|
|
|
|
In Windows 7 there is a sequence of mouse clicks on various icons which will display the buffer size of a given Com Port.
I can't remember that sequence at this moment.
(It's almost always 4096, for whatever reasons may exist)
If possible, I want to change it to 1024 (as a user; not in software)
For the moment, can someone help my failing brain with the secret sequence of clicks and icons that display the port buffer size of the USB BlueTooth adapter ?
|
|
|
|
|
Hi all,
I have a Win 7 64bit hp 8570w laptop. I've set the screen server to be active in 5 minutes. Other power management settings are as follows.
Dim the display - 5 minutes
Turn off the display - 10 minutes
Put the computer to sleep - 30 minutes
However, like around 2 minutes after I didn't use the laptop, it goes to sleep mode. Any idea why really happen that?
If required more information please let me know.
Thanks in advance
If you've never failed... You've never lived...
|
|
|
|
|
Is this on mains power or battery? Are you sure that you set the correct power save profile as the active one?
|
|
|
|
|
This is from main power. And yes, I set the correct power profile too. I cannot post a screenshot here, since there is no way to upload an image
If you've never failed... You've never lived...
|
|
|
|
|
Sounds like a fault with the PC. I suggest you call HP support.
|
|
|
|
|
Hmm. I disabled all the power plans (set timers to never) and the issue is still the same.
So I'll contact the support and see.
If you've never failed... You've never lived...
|
|
|
|
|
Yeah, this sounds like something specific to your hardware.
|
|
|
|
|
Everyone might have watched IRON MAN series, in part 2 of the series he uses surface computers containing a transparent glass slab , when i read about the details it was like there were laser-integrated motion sensing projectors which just sensed his hand signal and projected the images but i thought whats the difficulty in implementing a surface comp and i even heard MICROSOFT tried one surface computer which did not succeed
|
|
|
|
|
So what is your question?
|
|
|
|
|
why is it getting hard to implement a surface comp when the technology has advanced to heights
|
|
|
|
|
It isn't. Why don't you try asking a proper question?
|
|
|
|
|
Sir,i m talking about the comps which are used in the movie , it like just two glass sheets , i m talking about their implementation . I just wanted to know whats the technology to implement them in reality whereas in the movie its just like a screen on which an image is projected. Usually there seems to be a controlling unit below the screen. Its like a normal comp with it screen made larger.
|
|
|
|
|
irfanulla sharieff wrote: i m talking about the comps which are used in the movie You do realise that movies are not reality?
|
|
|
|
|
no offense Sir but the microsoft surface comp as in my view is just an enlarged touch screen phone with a good amount processors waiting to recognise the signals
|
|
|
|
|
Sorry, but I really don't understand what your problem is. If you just want to criticise Microsoft products then you maybe need to go to the Lounge, or some other web forum.
|
|
|
|
|
oh not really that was a joke sir i m planning to build one in the near future, i even had a page bookmarked but by mistake i deleted it in that they had given a brief info about polishing the glass surface and all stuff , so thought might get some ideas of mistakes were done by others and i didnt want to repeat them, since i want to program the LANs now at present as my project in my college ,my holidays are going on so thought i could do something related to hardware
|
|
|
|