8xx 915v3 5 Exe Sonic
Launch of the new Intel 9XX Gaming Site! Welcome to the brand new Intel 9XX Gaming website. This website will pretty much continue from the Google group but now we have a real place for the community to call home. This Modded Driver has the 852-865g and the 915 Drivers. All latest core files for the driver (ialmnt5.sys) have been acquired through Windows Vista Drivers. As Intel had given up making new dirvers for these controllers ages ago, this is the latest compatible diver.
My burner, listed above as hp DVD Writer 400c= drive (E:) DVD/CD-R, has stopped burning to DVD+R blanks. This is a first. When I put a DVD+R blank in the drive, usually Nero 6's Smart Start detects it, and a popup appears asking me what I want to do, burn or watch it. If I go to My Computer/Folders, the drive, i.e. DVD/CD-R (E:) hasn't detected either.
I can open and close the drive, reboot, and it won't detect the DVD+R blank, and I've tried various blanks. Nero and this driver have been burning to DVD+R blanks for months. I've rolled back the Windows XP System REstoratio, no go. I've uninstalled the hardware, rebooted so it reinstall, no go. This burner has always burned to DVD+R blanks. Can anyone tell me what's happening and why it won't accept a DVD+R blank?
Commercially recorded media has a higher reflectivity than recordable media - in other words, it takes a more powerful laser (and/or more sensitive pickup, depending on what you're doing) to get recordable media to be read. EXAMPLE: That's why early CD audio players often had problems with home-recorded CD's. And why a commercially recorded DVD may play AOK in your HP even now. Question: Are you a smoker, or is your computer in an area where cooking fumes, dust, pets, etc.
May be nearby? Sounds like you've got a film/coating built up on the DVD laser lens. Your power supply fan PULLS air into your system. And that could prevent your HP from accurately 'seeing' what type of disk you've inserted. Thats why I'm going to repeat what Callandor and simonlimb said. Clean your drive.
If you've got high speed internet, upgrading to Nero 7 can be done via download - and as mcp_jon pointed out, there is a big difference in performance plus more features plus the same interface you're used to. I think you've got a classic case of 'versionitis' - You might have removed REGISTRY references to Nero 7, but I bet that there were support files loaded into (say) System32 folder that are newer than the ones shipped with Nero 6 - the routine used for uninstalling and reinstalling v6 would normally not overwrite the newer files. And the uninstall sometimes will not remove all files. This is one of the reasons I use a utility like Norton's CleanSweep (part of the SystemWorks package - but there are others out there) that can watch what DLL files are used by a package and figure out if they're safe to delete.
If you don't mind some experimentation, try reinstalling Nero 7 - and tell us what happens. I've got a sneaking suspicion that your beast will be tamed '.Are we having FUN yet?' This is getting very frustrating. Historia de la publicidad raul eguizabal pdf to jpg.
I’ve done all the above, and I just ended up doing a non-destructive recovery to clean up my mess and make sure Windows XP's important files are in place. I used Windows Registry Pro to clean the registry of any previous Nero 6 files.
I deleted all other media that Nero said might interfere with a Nero product, and with that idea I ran Nero cleanpack and Nero-CleanTool (but that wasn't needed) to make sure my system was clean. I even ran a search for any files or folders of Nero 6 that remained. Then after two reboots to make sure the system was running right. I cleaned all the excess files with Run/%temp%, then I ran CCleaner, and Registry Pro's cleaner again to empty all the temp files everywhere and all excess baggage; moreover, I ran a registry 'issue' in CCleaner to empty the registry of any useless files.
I then ran system 'defrag' to organize all my files, and also I used a registry 'defrag' in Windows Registry Pro to organize my registry in accord with the previous system harddisk “Defrag.” My system is at max. Then I installed Nero 7 Premium, and I took pains, slowly, to make sure I installed right. Considering all that I did to make this a clean and correct installation, still Nero 7 Premium won’t accept a DVD+R blank. It acts as if it isn't there. Below are some facts that may help: 1) When I go to Computer, my burner drive, it's listed as DVD/CD-RW Drive (E:). In Control Panel/System Properties/HardWare/Device Manager/ it’s listed as HP DVD Writer 400c. It's properties say 'Device status ‘This device is working properly’”.