The Best Listen On The Net Web site

  Listen On The Net
Internet shopping for fiction is steadily booming (forgive the pun) and this means high competition between sites selling and marketing fiction products. This competition is good for you because it means everyone selling fiction has to watch their pricing like a hawk just to keep ahead of the pack.

The poster child dotcom business, Amazon.com has a lot to teach aspiring Internet entrepreneurs. Yet despite its huge product inventory, convenience and customer service, the company continues to lose millions of dollars and has seen a precipitous drop in the price of its stock. But things change. Lean sharp fiction companies are springing up. The fiction wholesaler has entered the market.Device Driver Basics

 by: Stephen Bucaro

Most people understand that the "hardware" part of their computer is the real physical parts, like the keyboard, mouse, modem, hard drive and so on. They understand that the "software" is computer bits stored on the hard drive, CD-ROM, or other storage media. But most people are a little hazy about exactly what a "driver" is.

In this article, I'm going to reveal in plain English what a driver is, why we need drivers, and exactly where the drivers are hiding. To give you a basic understanding, I'm going to go back, way back, to the early days of computers.

The Early Days

The year is 1981 and the world is in the midst of a severe resession. IBM's main frame business has slowed and the company is losing money. Up until now they had been laughing at the array of microcomputers on the market: Atari, Commodore, sinclair. Toys really, mostly used to play computer games.

The problem was, these "toys" were selling like hot cakes. IBM had to get into that market and get into it fast. They didn't have time to design and build a computer complete enough to compete in the market, so they built an "open system". They used commonly available electronic components and they published every design detail (including the code), and they even provided plug in slots so that others could build components for their computer.

And people did provide components for the IBM PC. They provided video cards, memory expansion cards, input-output port cards, game port cards, hard disk interface cards, and much more. How were all these various devices able to interface with the PC's operating system? That's where a "driver" comes in.

A hardware device is constructed with various electronic components using various control signals, but the software interface to the operating system is standardized. A device's interface to the operating system must follow the interface specification. A driver is a piece of software that translates the hardware's control signals to signals that the operating system expects, and translates signals from the operating system to the hardware's control signals.

When the computer is started up, it would look in the "system" directory for files with the extension ".drv" and load them into memory. Specific files like autoexec.bat, config.sys, and win.ini were used to inform the operating system about drivers. Hardware would be configured through these files, or through jumpers located on the device itself.

The driver specification evolved along with the PC. Today when a PC starts, it executes the program ntdetect.com which queries the hardware components and builds the registery key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINEHARDWARESYSTEMCurrentControlSet. This key exists only in memory and is created each time the computer boots. If all the drivers are loaded successfully, a copy of the key is saved as ControlSet00X.

Under the registery key CurrentControlSet, the subkey "Enum" contains a subkey for each harware device on the computer. Each device key contains fields for Hardware ID, Driver ID, Device Parameters, and other configuration data. The 32-bit drivers are files with the extension ".sys" and can be found in the folder C:/winnt/system32.

Driver Signing

Microsoft has been the brunt of much criticism because of the poor reliability of the Windows Operating System. I feel that much of this criticism is justified. On the other hand, as I described in part 1 of this article, the PC was designed by IBM as an "open" system. Anyone can sell a hardware device (or software) for the PC. Should Microsoft be held responsible for the quality from a third-party?

As I described in Part 1 of this article, the operating system doesn't interface directly to a hardware device. There is a piece of software called a "driver" that translates the hardware's control signals to signals that the operating system expects, and translates signals from operating system to the hardware's control signals. Obviously, the hardware manufacturer provides the driver.

Because the driver works between the operating system and the hardware, a bug in the driver can cause a serious problem. Many of the problems with Windows have come from bugs in third-party drivers that Microsoft had nothing to do with. For this reason, Microsoft created a Hardware Quality Lab to test drivers. A hardware manufacturer can submit their driver for testing, and if it is passes rigorous compatibility testing, it receives Microsoft's digital signature.

You may have received a message during the installation of a hardware device warning that the driver was not signed. Why would a hardware manufacturer fail to have their driver certified by Microsoft? The computer hardware market is very competitive and the manufacturer might want to bring a new product to market before thorough testing can be completed. Or maybe they don't want to or can't afford to pay Microsoft for certification. The question is, should you click on the "Continue" button to install the unsigned driver?

In my experience, I have never been able to trace a problem to an unsigned driver. If it's your home computer and you performed a back-up recently, go ahead and install the unsigned driver. If it's a computer on a corporate network, you may want to back-out of the installation and see if you can locate a signed driver first. Many times a manufacturer will release a product with an unsigned driver, then later provide a signed driver as a free download from their website.

If you decide to go ahead and install an unsigned driver, you can always update the driver later. If your computer works with the unsigned driver, I would not update the driver. When it comes to updating drivers (or the computers BIOS) I go by the old saying, "if it ain't broke don't fix it".

To update a driver, select Start | Settings | Control Panel and double-click on the "System Properties" Utility. In the "System Properties" Utility, select the "Hardware" tab and click on the "Device Manager" button. In the "Device Manager" window, right-click on the device in the list and select "Properties" in the popup menu. In the "Properties" dialog box, select the driver tab and click on the "Update Driver..." button.

In the "Properties" dialog box driver tab, you may have noticed the "Roll Back Driver" button. If your computer has problems with the new drive, you can click on the "Roll Back Driver" button to roll back to the previous the driver. Driver roll back saves only one previous driver, so if you update a driver, then update it again, the original driver is gone. If the computer has problems with the new driver, always roll back to the original driver before trying a different one. That way you'll always have the original driver to roll back to.

Copyright(C) Bucaro TecHelp.

Permission is granted for the below article to forward, reprint, distribute, use for ezine, newsletter, website, offer as free bonus or part of a product for sale as long as no changes are made and the byline, copyright, and the resource box below is included.

About The Author

Stephen Bucaro


To learn how to maintain your computer and use it more effectively to design a Web site and make money on the Web visit bucarotechelp.com To subscribe to Bucaro TecHelp Newsletter visit http://bucarotechelp.com/search/000800.asp

fiction

Listen On The Net
Need information on Internet Radio, audio or entertainment? Look no further - you've found a great repository for all of this information. If you want to listen to music or even to listen to free music just follow our sponsored links and you will find some great information.
Listen On The Net

Corporate news or equity market information on fiction companies will be found at websites of brokers or share traders. Articles of this kind can give you a different perspective on fiction which enable you to identify solid, growing fiction organizations compared to fly-by-night operators.

It may surprise you to learn that fiction companies will happily add you to their press release circulation list so that you can keep right up to date with developments in the field of fiction including new fiction products which may be of particular interest to consumers like yourself.
WDBZ's Mr. Listen On The Net WDBZ's Mr. Listen On The Net WDBZ's Mr. Listen On The Net WDBZ's Mr. Listen On The Net WDBZ's Mr. Listen On The Net WDBZ's Mr. Listen On The Net

Home | Site Map | fiction | foreign audio books | free audio books | french audio books | german audio books | history audio books | jim gough narrates audio books | lincoln audio books | online audio books

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.

Main Menu
Listen On The Net
Site Resources

Free Tell A Friend from Bravenet.com

News for 16-Dec-08

Source: BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition
Universal test 'would slash Aids'

Source: BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition
Gaza power cut blamed on blockade

Source: BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition
Europe to set out economic plans

Source: BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition
Chinese death row trial 'flawed'

Source: BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition
Pakistan 'mulls US drone action'

Source: BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition
Europe debates space station cost

Source: BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition
F1 boss plans scoring revolution

Source: BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition
Milligan memorabilia auction fetches £73,000

Source: BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition
China's central bank cuts rates

Source: BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition
India navy defends piracy sinking

Search the Web
fiction
foreign audio books
free audio books
french audio books
german audio books
history audio books
jim gough narrates audio books
lincoln audio books
online audio books
read audio books

Last Updated: Tuesday, 16-Dec-2008 00:02:04 MST
Copyright © 2004 :: Listen On The Net
Xbox online games :: Medical Meetings :: Kids Meet :: Kids Meet

Listen On The Net

Real Time Media On The Net   Present On The Net   Law Meet