[geeks] The Registry (?)
Jon Gilbert
jjj at io.com
Sat Aug 30 06:05:57 CDT 2008
At work we have these kiosks that are for customers to submit digital
files to the photo lab in the back of our store. The kiosks are
Windows 2000 and have Micro-ATX motherboards based on the old Socket
475 Celeron, and they just die under the load of 12 megapixel files.
(They were made back in the day when 4 megapixels was "alot.") But
buying all new kiosks is cost prohibitive, so I decided to swap out
the motherboards.
I'm using one kiosk as a guinea pig to see what would be involved in
upgrading the motherboard. I was able to swap out the motherboard with
a Biostar board with a 2.53 GHz Core 2 Duo. It booted fine, and I then
installed all the new drivers. However the kiosk's software crashes
due to the fact it cannot set the sound volume. I noticed that the
previous motherboard's sound driver control panel was still there, so
I did "Add/Remove Software" and got rid of it. Sound plays just fine
out of the new sound port on the new motherboard, and all the stuff in
the device manager and sound control panel looks kosher. However the
crash still occurs.
I'm guessing that somewhere in the registry, some crap remains from
the old sound drivers from the previous motherboard, but I have no
idea about how go about fixing this. I remember reading online that
there are programs that repair the registry... anybody know if that is
the proper way to go about fixing this? (I'm pretty much a noob when
it comes to Windows.) Or is the registry not where I should be looking
to solve this problem?
I also thought perhaps that I need to update DirectX. Is it possible
that the kiosk software (which relies on java and Shockwave from what
I can tell) uses DirectX APIs to control things like system sound
volume?
Thanks for any tips.
-j
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