News43 mins ago
Urgent help needed!
9 Answers
In a moment of frustration I uninstalled some sound driver on my laptop! I know this because after I did this my sound files did not play. This driver was installed by the store I bought my computer from so I can not find it on download.com. I dont remember deleting anything so the setup program should still be on my computer, but I searched for it and nothing came up. What should I do???
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In Win2000/XP, right click MyComputer > manage > device manager is listed on the left. If you have uninstalled the sound card driver or there is a problem with it you will see either a question mark (unknown device) or a yellow exclamation mark or red cross to say the device has a problem. In Windows 98 right click My Computer > properties > device manager. Your windows\inf folder is hidden by default so to show it right click My Computer > explore > tools > folder options > view > ensure "show hidden files and folders" is selected (I can't remember where this is in Windows 98, I think it is in the view menu when you explore). To update the driver, double click the device in device manager > driver > update driver > go through the wizard and specify the C:\windows\inf folder(C:\winnt\inf for Windows 2000) when you "search for a suitable driver". Since the driver has already been installed once, all the relevant info is in here (and also in the C:\windows\system and system32 folders). If the device manager looks OK (there are no question, exclamation or red cross marks) then it is not the sound card driver.
j2buttonsw thanks so much for taking the time out to answer in such detail. I did everything you suggested, went into device manager, found my inf folder etc, but there was just no listing for a 'sound' driver or anything even remotely related to a sound card and no drivers that seemed to be dysfunctional.
If it helps diagnose the problem, this is the message I get when I try to play a sound file: "MMSYSTEM002 A device ID has been used that is out of range for your system."
Is there any alternative available on the net that can fix the problem? I forgot to mention that I bought this laptop from abroad and it has passed it's warranty date so there's no one I can take it to. Thank you once again!
What operating system are you running? Who is the laptop manufacturer? In 2000/XP you will still have entries for sound in the device manager even if you don't have a sound card. You may have disabled the sound in the BIOS which will require you to enter the BIOS setup prior to windows booting (usually by pressing F1/F2/delete or a combination) then re-enabling it. Searching the web for that error shows that other people have fixed that error by remapping the preferred multimedia device: start > settings > control panel > multimedia (or equivalent) make sure the preferred devices are your onboard sound (though, of course, you will get this error if you don't have a sound card installed). I'm guessing you run 98 and have disabled the sound in the BIOS.