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13 Posts
When I up graded from xp to windows 7 now my DVD rom don't work and my sound card won't work it a sound blaster
since he already upgraded, the drivers are already there, pulling it out and popping it back in wont change the drivers.Open up the side and pull the power to the DVD rom then turn on the computer. Plug it back in after it boots up...Windows 7 is SUPPOSED to look for drivers when new equipment is installed.:yes:
As others have already told you it's entirely possible that your old devices are not compatible with Windows 7 (basically no one wrote drivers for them).I looked on the web and no more updates for sound card but I don't have $ to get xp or vista back on it I know it's a down grade but when my comp crashed I put windows 7 on it and clean wipe
Yep, definately check Newegg. I got 2 Samsung DVD burners for $14.00 each.You mentioned you are tight on money, but this might be within your budget. You will probably be able to find a new generic audio card for under $10 delivered and a new DVD drive for under $20 delivered from places like Newegg and eBay. Both Win 7 compatible.
such as thisWindows XP to Win7? How old is that computer? I have a feeling you wasted some money.
Because your computer crashed, is a poor reason to upgrade your computer.....maybe it crashed because you have hardware issues. Sort of like putting a new paint job on your car because it's running bad.
Not sure why $$ is an issue going back to XP....if you had it before, then you still own the license. If you lost the info....then, well....might explain why your having issues.
As a final note....this place is a great place for help...but there are better places to get computer help
:laughing::laughing::laughing:
Wow, a first time post pointing us to a pay service? I'm sure that's legit.As a professional Desktop engineer, some of you are making this way too hard for a newbie. I have to deal with new models every month and always worry about compatible drivers and different OS's. While many of us do the hard things easily, it is still very simple.
The correct answer is to look in the device manager. Click on the start button (lower left-hand corner), on the menu, right-click on Computer and choose Properties. In the upper left hand corner of the window that pops up, click on Device Manager. The simple part is, if the operating system sees the devices, the will show under the heading of "Other Devices" with a yellow "caution" triangle. If they do not show there, they are disconnected or malfunctioning. If you locate them under teir device type, there will be a message when you right-click on the device and go to properties telling you the device was unable to start.
While you could spend a lot of time tracking down the drivers (if the devces are physically there), I would suggest going to http://www.driveridentifier.com. Allow it to search your devices and see if it finds drivers for them. If it is successful, you will have to pay $20 to start a 1 year account that will let you search up to 15 computers. Once paid, you will get the report giving you the link to the exact driver you need. I have yet to have this fail and I run into many larger issues (trying to find 32-bit drivers for systems only ever intended to run 64-bit operating systems). You can of set the cost by sharing it with friends doing the same and charging them $5 to use your account.
It is. It does cost, but it can save lot more than replacing devices without verifying. So often during upgrades, people assume that a failure is equip, when it rarely is. Trust me when I say it is highly under rated web site.TheBobmanNH said:Wow, a first time post pointing us to a pay service? I'm sure that's legit.
3DP Chip does pretty much the same thing, for free.I would suggest going to http://www.driveridentifier.com