MaximumPC 2004 09

(Dariusz) #1
PUSHING ALL THE RIGHT
BUTTONS
I have a Windows XP Pro-based
machine with an AMD Athlon
XP 1800+ processor, a GeForce 3
Ti 200 videocard, a Soyo Dragon
Plus motherboard, and a 120GB
Western Digital hard drive. For
some reason, the power button
doesn’t work properly anymore.
After shutting down, I have to
turn off the surge protector for 30
minutes and then turn it back on
for the power button to respond.
If I don’t do this, the power
button doesn’t respond at all.
What is the problem? Do I have
to replace the power supply or is
it an issue with the case?
—DUY NGUYEN

The Doctor has seen this on a few
occasions and it’s usually related to a
conflict between a motherboard and
the power supply. Sometimes simply
swapping the power supply clears up
the issue. While the Doc hasn’t nailed
down the cause, it may have some-
thing to do with the power supply’s
“power good” signal. Because ATX
motherboards are equipped with their
own power switch for operation, a
nominal bit of juice flows to the board
even when the PC is technically off.
When the PC is turned on, the power
supply waits from 100ms to 500ms
for the voltage to stabilize and then
sends a power good signal to the
motherboard and the system boots. If
the power good signal is not sent or
is somehow interrupted, the system
may not boot. Resetting the power
supply by cutting the power and then
turning it on somehow fixes this. So
you likely have a bum power supply
or one that is failing, or a motherboard
that is failing. Swapping PSUs with
your buddy may be the easiest and
cheapest way to find out.

TRIPPING OVER STREETS
AND TRIPS
I have tried to fully load the
complete MS Works Suite 2004
Streets and Trips program from the
DVD I own but it only loads the
operating portion of the program,
meaning I must have the DVD
in the drive when I access it. The

Encarta program on the same
DVD gave me a choice during
installation so I could load the
complete program but Streets and
Trips gave me no option. How can
I get the whole program loaded
so I don’t have to carry the DVD
with me when I travel?
—RICK GOLDTHWAITE

Yet more proof that some guys will do
anything to keep from having to ask
for directions. Luckily, what you want
is easy to accomplish. First, you’ll
need a CD burning application that
will allow you to make disc images,
which are virtual copies of your CDs
and DVDs that exist on your hard
drive. Almost all commercial burning
applications allow this through “Copy
Disc” or “Make Disc Image” selec-
tions. In essence, you’ll be copying
the contents of the disc not to another
disc, but to a single file instead.
First, you’ll have to uninstall the
software that requires the DVD (you’ll
see why later). Insert the DVD into
your laptop’s optical drive. In Nero 6 ,

go to Recorder > Make Image file.
In Easy CD Creator 6 , select Copy
DVD from the main menu. The Roxio
Disc Copier will pop up. Click the
Advanced button to get the options
you’ll need. Select your optical drive
as the Source. Under Destination,
click the Disc Image radio button.
Then click Save As and indicate
where you want the disc image to be
saved. Save the file as an ISO image
with a descriptive name (and make
sure you’ve got enough space on
your hard drive to accommodate the
disc’s contents). Click OK, and a disc
image will be created; depending on
the speed of your hard drive and the
size of the DVD, this could take a long
time. When the process is finished,
you’ll have a large file with the ISO
extension.
Now go to http://www.daemon-tools.com
and download the latest version of the
free Daemon Tools utility. If the serv-
er’s down, just do a Google search
and you’ll find many sites hosting this
wonderful little app. Install Daemon
Tools and restart your PC. In your

system tray you’ll see an icon with a
red lightning bolt—that’s the Daemon
Tools virtual drive utility. Right-click
it, select Virtual CD/DVD-ROM, click
the drive letter that represents your
optical drive, select Mount Image,
and point Daemon Tools to your
newly-created ISO file.
Daemon Tools creates a virtual
optical drive on your PC that’s essen-
tially indistinguishable from a normal
one. So you’ll have to reinstall your
application from this new virtual
drive. Once you do, you’ll have a por-
table copy of your software for travel.
There’s an unpleasant side
effect, however. Daemon Tools is
often employed by software pirates,
so many recent games will refuse
to launch if you have this util-
ity installed—even if it’s not in use.
There’s no work-around for this, so
you’ll have to uninstall and reinstall
the utility if your games don’t want to
make nice.

THE RELUCTANT BURNER
I have a Hi-Val 32/10/40 CD-

Several months ago the Autoplay
feature for my CD and DVD drives
stopped working. I can still access
the drives by opening them from My
Computer but I miss the Autoplay
feature. The strange thing is that I
have Autoplay set for each drive’s
default settings but it still won’t work.
I’ve tried uninstalling and reinstalling
the drives, doing several “System
Restores” and visiting Microsoft’s
Knowledge Base with no results.
Do you have any ideas about what I should
try next? Also, have I overlooked anything you
can thank of? Thanks, Doc!
—MIKE POESCHL

The Doctor has to hand it to you—you’ve done
your due diligence. But as great a resource as the
Knowledge Base is, the suggested “fix” for this
problem isn’t always effective, as you’ve discovered.
Here’s another solution. From the Start menu, select
Run and enter GPEDIT.MSC in the dialog box. Click

OK, and the Group Policy window will open. On the
menu tree, expand Computer Configuration by click-
ing the plus sign, then do the same for Administrative
Templates, and then System. Click on System, and
then look in the right-hand pane. You’ll see a selec-
tion called Turn Off Autoplay. Double-click it, and
click the Enabled radio button. Close the window,
restart your PC, and all should be well again.

If the normal ways to re-enable Autoplay
don’t work, you should check the setting
in Group Policy Editor.

AUTOPLAY ‘N’ PRAY


Ask the Doctor Symptom Diagnosis Cure


 MA XIMUMPC SEPTEMBER 2004 4

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