[Ham-Computers] From Dave's Desk

Karty, Steven [email protected]
Mon, 13 May 2002 09:01:39 -0400


Although I don't think it should be necessary to start from scratch, as Ron
proposes below, it might be a good idea to un-install and physically remove
any cards that you don't need:  Then un-install and re-install your mouse
driver.  You can always re-install the other cards later, after you get the
mouse working reliably.  I had a similar problem that was fixed only after I
removed a zip drive interface card.  

73, Steven - N5SK 

-----Original Message-----
From: Ronald KA4INM Youvan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Saturday, May 11, 2002 2:42 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Ham-Computers] From Dave's Desk

> I moved a HD from one computer to the other and everything seems to be 
> working fine except:
> Most of the time I boot up it says that it did not find a mouse attached 
> to this machine.  If I do a cold boot the next time it seems ok.

   Changing some of the hardware `under' the installed software is not
a gud idea, I think the UNIX's will fare better than M$ products, why
don't you delete everything and re-install everything, allowing the
software to find the new hardware?

       73 (= Best Regards) de: Ron [email protected]