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PC & MAC CLINIC - On line problem solving. (CPU)     

Crocodile - 16 Dec 2002 03:59

Optimist - 17 May 2004 12:08 - 1731 of 11003

Thanks Spaceman I'll check it out.

Seymour Clearly - 18 May 2004 08:59 - 1732 of 11003

Have made a hash of installing a 3Com Wireless PC card in my laptop - 'cause I couldn't find my Win 98 CD (now found).

When I boot up now I get messages saying the following files couldn't be found:

vredir.vxd
dfs.vxd
msnp32.dll

and then it says Windows networking couldn't be established. Have tried uninstalling and reinstalling the PC card software but just the same messages. Does anyone know how I can get these back without a complete reinstallation of W98. TIA.

Optimist - 18 May 2004 10:04 - 1733 of 11003

Seymor

First go into network properties and delete any network connection that is trying to use it. Then goto device manager and uninstall the card. Shut down the computer and remove the card then reboot. For good luck do a search for new hardware. Shut down the computer, reinstall the card which with luck will be detected on startup and ask you for the CD's

Optimist - 18 May 2004 10:11 - 1734 of 11003

A tip for anyone with plenty of disk space.

Create a directory called Setup on your C drive and a sub dir called windows XP. Copy your installation CD here and it is always availible when needed.

You can also copy any program CD's to a separate directory under Setup. Most times you can install the program from here which is also far faster.

Iain - 18 May 2004 13:04 - 1735 of 11003

I want to create a boot up disk.
Im using XP PRO.
So far I have put a Floppy disk in. chosen Format: create a startup disk and done that.
I then changed my bios to boot from A first. It does this then I get a Command prompt (Hope thats the right word) what do I type to see if my Bootup disk is working?
Also can I create a startup on a CD.?
If the above is the totally wrong way of doing it. HELP Please!:-)


Optimist - 18 May 2004 13:54 - 1736 of 11003

Iain

You can't create a boot disk for Win XP. If you are using a FAT32 file system you can create an MSDOS boot disk that will access the hard drive but it will not load XP. You can also find some Lynux based boot disks that will read an NTFS disk.

You can use the recovery console, which is availible at boot or on the installation CD, to fix any Win XP boot problems. This has some powerful utilities but you need to know what you are doing.

If you are using FAT32 file system you would do well to convert to NTFS. Sooner or later it will save your data.

Iain - 18 May 2004 15:28 - 1737 of 11003

When I have Formatted drive previously It has copied in NTFS.
So if i have probs I use recovery console?
I Have a bit of Knowledge.Dangerous?:-)

Optimist - 18 May 2004 15:40 - 1738 of 11003

You can only format a hard drive in NTFS not floppeis or CD.

Recovery console is a way of accessing XP from a command line when it won't boot. The most used command is probrably "CHKDSK" which is OK. Use caution with any others.

Spaceman - 18 May 2004 16:54 - 1739 of 11003

Iain, why do you think you need a boot disk? its not normally needed or advised with w2k onwards?

Seymour Clearly - 18 May 2004 21:16 - 1740 of 11003

Optimist, thanks for the help so far, but still struggling. Re my post 1731, I have tried to get into the windows networking stuff, this is what I have:

Using Win 98 in control panel, I have "Network". Click on that brings up three tabs, first is Configuration. In this it says:

Client for Microsoft networks
Microsoft family login
Dial up adapter
TCP/IP

Is one of these the one I want to remove? Sorry for being so thick but I feel I am in a vat of treacle making slow progress at the moment. TIA (again!).

Optimist - 18 May 2004 23:46 - 1741 of 11003

Seymour

Right click network neibourhood and select properties. You should get a list of all your network connections including dial up, LAn and wireless networks (if you have been unlucky enough to aquire any trojan dialers they will also be listed here so it is worth checking). If there are any that connect to your wireless card then delete them - it is possible that the instalation never got that far and therefore there are no connections.

What you are trying to do is get rid of all possible refferences to your wirless card so that when you reinstall it Windows has the best chance of sorting it automatically. Ifg that does not work we will have to find some other way.

Edit I think you may have got to your list by the method I suggested in which case you don't have a connection to the wirless card so don't worry about that stage.

2Abbey - 19 May 2004 07:37 - 1742 of 11003

Morning All,

Just thought I would update everyone on my proposed RAID setup and the resolution of the problems, see earlier post 1713

I managed to set up the raid array as raid 0. Apparently Windows needs a third party driver to make this work. Consulted my manual, found the relevant file using search and attempted to load into the new machine to make the discs work from the floppy drive (copied file)

No joy here. Consulted Gigabyte, told the file was in the boot driver section, bootdrv, found this again using search, went to the menu and up comes a dos screen giving various selections of drivers for additional arrangements. Put floppy into drive, selected the driver for the Silicon Image raid array and the drivers were copied to the floppy.

When loading up Xp, it comes to a screen where it asks if you want to load third party drivers, if you do not have any the setup fails. Click S and the floppy starts and loads in the relevant links. I have a feeling the other software is actually on the Xp disc.

Setup then continues as normal. When finished alter the bios to boot from SCUZI and not from the IDE port.

Thanks for all the help in the past.

Spaceman - 19 May 2004 07:48 - 1743 of 11003

2abbey, glad you are sorted, when you reported the problem earlier it sounded as though you hadnt got the drives working, normally you can check raid drives via the raid BIOS on the mobo (or raid card).

The method you describe is the standard way of specifying raid or scsi arrays for w2k and xp.

Optimist - 19 May 2004 08:57 - 1744 of 11003

2abbey

Good to see you got it sorted. I'm still interested to know why you need to have a RAID array.

Spaceman - 19 May 2004 09:04 - 1745 of 11003

o is biffer over the road sorted out? i wasnt sure from his posts?

Optimist - 19 May 2004 09:10 - 1746 of 11003

S I think he is still trying things but concentrating on cooling. which IMO is the first thing to eliminate.

Spaceman - 19 May 2004 09:22 - 1747 of 11003

O yes, did you see my comments re that one, may be the heatsink is not alligned if one of the pads is missing. I agree with yo its probably cooling if he has bigger cpu or extra cards etc could be power.

Spaceman - 19 May 2004 09:23 - 1748 of 11003

Edit Wrong thread

Optimist - 19 May 2004 09:30 - 1749 of 11003

S Yes I did see your comments. Very useful as I had not come accross the pad system myself. I think he may get a new CPU heatsink which should prove it one way or the other.

2Abbey - 19 May 2004 09:51 - 1750 of 11003

Initially my problem was one of setting up the Raid array in the bios, eventually sorted that by trying various combinations etc, the suggestions in the handbook didn't seem to work,

Optimist, just thought I would try one as I needed one new drive in any event and since the mobo supports raid i would give it a try. Heard good results as for speed etc.

In the process of updating for microsoft atm, big list!
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