Hey I just had the same thing go wrong and this fix also worked for me gracias to the geniuses...
Hey I just had the same thing go wrong and this fix also worked for me gracias to the geniuses...
Post *13 works fine for me as well.
I have made a couple of clean XP installs and the snd32 file is missing every time (I only install XP, not any vendors extra driver since the sound card is recognized by XP already).
Thanks a lot!
/Fredrik
Originally Posted by Spoon
Originally Posted by Unregistered
this is extreme good work, just navigate by command session, It did not fail me, It won't fail you! Win XP Pro.
Very clever!! Very smart guys -- You can trust them!!
*13 works great for windows XP pro ... takes just a minute ... just be sure to use Dell XP Windows XP CD and not an MS XP update CD (i.e. make sure the CD you are using has the i386 folder.
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU
PS I SUSPECT UNINSTALLING OUTLOOK EXPRESS DELETES THIS DLL FILE
PSS IT IS NO LONGER RAGING AGAINST THE WIND TO REALIZE THAT MICROSOFT SUCKS. IT IS A FAILING COMPANY. FIGHT .NET! DO NOT INSTALL IT. DO NOT USE IT.
I'm having the same problem, i tried doing that x and y thing, but it doesn't solve the problem. Today, I hade the volume icon on my taskbar, and now it's not there. I have the sound, but for some reason i'm unable to bring back the icon. I tried putting it back by going through control panel and i've got the message that my Volume Control program is uninstalled. I don't know how to install it, please help me.Originally Posted by Unregistered
I would really appreciate anyone's help. Thanks in advance.
i do a search for "volume" int he registry and i can't find "volume control." would appreciate some help.
HELP!! I have ME and I can't for the life of me figure out how to get the sound back. I tried to reinstall the driver off the sys restore disk and it tells me it can't find it. I also tried to do a system restore and it tells me it can't restore it to a previous point. I dont' know what to do.
this worked perfectly! Thanks!
Wow. There certainly are a lot of Unregistered's in this post. Doesn't anybody register anymore? Sure helps to distinguish who's who.
Anyway,...
My original post was about the Master Volume Control Panel window disappearing while still having the speaker icon available from the task bar near the clock.
If the icon is missing, then your Audio Device driver is missing or not installed. Or it may be listed as Unknown in the device manager.
If you've exhausted all other means of trying to locate the driver that may not be on Windows or your Hardware disc, and you don't know the vendor who made your device, then you might try this as a last ditch effort. What I'm about to suggest is extreme...but it did work when mine took a dump.
We're going to go look for numbers on microchips!
Shut your system down and remove the cover on your computer...unless its still under warranty. If its under warranty, go get a remedy from your vendor.
Leave it plugged in so that it remains grounded, and don't touch any of the chips!
As I said, we're going to go look at chipset numbers which can get you the correct driver, which will in turn, get your sound back.
If you have a separate sound card, (they are screwed into the back of your machine and have the input/output jacks) look on it and copy down numbers from any chipset that is on its board. There may be several numbers on a chip. I believe we want the number from the first line.
If you don't have a sound card as described, then your sound is integrated into your mother board. Since a mother board contains many chips, isolate the audio chip by following your CD-ROM drive audio leads (two or three small guage leads) down to where they connect onto your mother board. The chip should be very close to that connection. Copy down the number from it.
Now that you have a number, go online and do a search.
In the search box type in the word --> chipset (plus the number you found)
Click go.
Your manufacturer will most likely show up in the results.
Download the driver for that number.
I know this sounds extreme. But it worked for me.
Good luck & Best wishes.
Craze
Last edited by Craze; 09-24-2004 at 05:26 PM.
This is an Edit to the original post for resetting "X" & "Y" coordinates for a missing Master Volume Control Panel. It may help some who have almost gotten there, to find X & Y.
NOTE: If you don't have a speaker icon in your taskbar, this fix won't help.
Your Audio Device driver is not installed.
START>RUN...type REGEDIT...click OK.
Expand tree for HKEY_CURRENT_ USER
Click Software
Use "EDIT" tab in tool bar...select FIND...type in VOLUME CONTROL.
Click FIND NEXT.
Click on VOLUME CONTROL...X and Y should appear in the right pane window.
If you do not find X & Y...look in the folder directly below the VOLUME CONTROL which would be your Audio Device.
Note the value of X & Y in paranthesis. Its probably a huge number that indicates that the volume control panel is displaying offscreen.
Right click on X
Select Modify
Click "DECIMAL" radio button.
Type in the number 5
Click OK.
Repeat for "Y".
Close Registry
Done.
Open Volume Control Panel and smile. :smile2:
Craze
Maybe I've missed the premise of this thread, and this has already been covered. If this is the case, I'm sorry for butting in, as I'm obviously guilty of laziness in not reading all the posts :o
Normally you can bring back the volume icon onto the task bar from Control Panel > Sounds and Multimedia. That is assuming there's not a worse underlying problem, of course.
Hi Christina,
No problem. From post *41...this is a worse case scenario.
Your option, while a good one, is not available when the audio device is either unknown, or doesn't have a driver.
I first experienced this when I had to reformat on 98SE. ME sounds similar.
Windows either couldn't find the device or the driver and listed it as Unknown.
Mine was nowhere on the Hardware disc to be found as well.
My audio device "Audio for Crystal WDM Audio Codec" was not listed at that time while the problem was occurring as it is shown in the attachment. No Icon either.
But I'm open for trying to locate an audio device/driver that Windows refuses to find.
Thanks - Craze
Originally Posted by Unregistered
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