So I buy a new 512mb Geforce 7900GS AGP (best thing that will work with my aging setup - anything more powerful and PCI-e based would practically require a whole new PC which I'm not getting into right now). I'm using Windows 2000.
-I plug the card in, computer boots up fine.
-I proceed to install the drivers. Apparently, it will only let me install the older V93.82 Nvidia driver and not the newest V94.24 one. Weird, but oh well.
-Restart, computer boots up... but hangs at about 2/3rds of the progress bar under the Windows 2000 Professional logo.
-I try safe mode, but I can't find what's wrong.
-Out of desperation, I boot in kernel debug mode. It works, with hardware acceleration and everything! So obviously, the card isn't b0rked. Thank god.
-But here's the weird thing, remember how windows booted fine before I installed the drivers? After I remove the drivers, the logo progress bar freeze problem remains.
-Even weirder, I put my old card back in... and I get the same problem now!
So, what changed, when I installed those drivers and then removed them, that made Windows only work properly in safe mode or debug mode?
Yes, I will reformat my computer sometime soon (and finally cave and install Windows XP while I'm at it) but until then, I'd sure like to have a properly working computer.
Riddle me this. (windows 2k startup problem)
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Riddle me this. (windows 2k startup problem)
[size=75][b]Procrastination.[/b]
Hard Work Often Pays Off After Time, but Laziness Always Pays Off Now.[/size]
Hard Work Often Pays Off After Time, but Laziness Always Pays Off Now.[/size]
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- ZSNES Developer
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- Joined: Tue Dec 28, 2004 6:47 am
Before you install the new card, you need to uninstall the old drivers of that card first (which you haven't mentioned what it was yet).
Once in a blue moon, the drivers released could have missing entries for your specific hardware and/or OS. You could try to complain to NVidia or find a modded version that supports them all.
Once in a blue moon, the drivers released could have missing entries for your specific hardware and/or OS. You could try to complain to NVidia or find a modded version that supports them all.
Continuing [url=http://slickproductions.org/forum/index.php?board=13.0]FF4[/url] Research...
Yeah of course, I forgot to mention that I did uninstall the old drivers first (but perhaps because it seemed obvious).
Well the problem I'm having now has nothing to do with my new card anymore. Like I said, windows won't start up normally anymore even though I reinstalled my old card.
Well the problem I'm having now has nothing to do with my new card anymore. Like I said, windows won't start up normally anymore even though I reinstalled my old card.
[size=75][b]Procrastination.[/b]
Hard Work Often Pays Off After Time, but Laziness Always Pays Off Now.[/size]
Hard Work Often Pays Off After Time, but Laziness Always Pays Off Now.[/size]
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- ZSNES Developer
- Posts: 6747
- Joined: Tue Dec 28, 2004 6:47 am
I guess I'll try that later.Deathlike2 wrote:You would have to know which driver is failing hard.
Try uninstalling/reinstalling the mobo's AGP driver and see if that helps.
DFI LanParty NF3-250Gbodditude wrote:What motherboard are you using?
[size=75][b]Procrastination.[/b]
Hard Work Often Pays Off After Time, but Laziness Always Pays Off Now.[/size]
Hard Work Often Pays Off After Time, but Laziness Always Pays Off Now.[/size]
Try booting in safe mode, setting the display adapter to standard VGA, and reboot into normal mode. If that works, go though msconfig (grab it from an XP machine) or the registry and disable startup programs. Reboot, verify that system is working naked. Install nvidia drivers. Reboot. If working, reenable startup programs one-by-one until it breaks. Disable/uninstall/update suspect program.
Oh, and cross your fingers. Sometimes Windows is just stubborn. Back up important stuff ASAP, in case a simple dump-and-reload is the best solution.
Edit: Update your chipset drivers, too. nForce platform drivers are available on NVIDIA's website. You have an nForce 3 250Gb.
Oh, and cross your fingers. Sometimes Windows is just stubborn. Back up important stuff ASAP, in case a simple dump-and-reload is the best solution.
Edit: Update your chipset drivers, too. nForce platform drivers are available on NVIDIA's website. You have an nForce 3 250Gb.
Why yes, my shift key *IS* broken.
Ok, I'm not sure if I'm looking at the wrong thing but the nforce drivers available on the Nvidia site seem to only go down to 4. :/odditude wrote:Edit: Update your chipset drivers, too. nForce platform drivers are available on NVIDIA's website. You have an nForce 3 250Gb.
(edit: nevermind, found it under legacy drivers. Man, I had no idea my mobo was that outdated)
[size=75][b]Procrastination.[/b]
Hard Work Often Pays Off After Time, but Laziness Always Pays Off Now.[/size]
Hard Work Often Pays Off After Time, but Laziness Always Pays Off Now.[/size]
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- Buzzkill Gil
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ftp://download.nvidia.com/Windows/blackmyst wrote:Ok, I'm not sure if I'm looking at the wrong thing but the nforce drivers available on the Nvidia site seem to only go down to 4. :/odditude wrote:Edit: Update your chipset drivers, too. nForce platform drivers are available on NVIDIA's website. You have an nForce 3 250Gb.
(edit: nevermind, found it under legacy drivers. Man, I had no idea my mobo was that outdated)
Not so useful now that they've put most of their old products on the list, but it served me well for quite a while after they removed TNT support from the drivers(since they kept listing the drivers as for "TNT through GeforceCurrentNumber).