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USB driver problem with Win98SE



 
 
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  #11  
Old October 5th 06, 06:27 PM posted to microsoft.public.win98.printing
Don Eagle
External Usenet User
 
Posts: 5
Default USB driver problem with Win98SE

Dear Gary, Thanks for all your help. Sorry about the delay in
responding. I had a retreat, and then a family emergency, which has
delayed everything..

My mother board has 2 USB1 ports. I have an Adeptec pci card with 5
USB2 ports; all have worked before. The printer was connected to a USB2
port. I still haven't deleted all USB ports in Safe Mode and tried
reinstalling them.

I went to the site you mentioned, but I do not get the error messages it
shows. I also went to this site:
http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/d...me=c000164 41
I tried solution 3, but it didn't work either. I did have over 1000
files of the form hpz*.* left behind by the installation, which I
deleted before reinstalling.

I used Windows explorer to look at the CD, and the driver folders are
there with files inside them. I also tried not doing the USB connection
during installation, but waiting for the next boot. Windows told me it
had detected new hardware, named it correctly, said it was building a
driver database, and still said it couldn't find the driver. The only
other thing I tried was to look in the registry for the product ID code.
HP at one time told me to delete that key if it were there after
removal. It wasn't. After installation the key was PID_c202. HP's web
site tells me the key should be PID_c102. I don't know if that matters,
and I did not try to edit it. The HP help desk gave me a key for the
wrong printer entirely.

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Clicked Send too soon.

Here's the link:

http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/d...dlc=en&lang=en

TinyURL=http://tinyurl.com/k3qmg

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message news:...
Never mind, I decided to go back to the beginning and review your

case. Is
this the problem you're having? Read it through, OK? There is a

special
section for Win98.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message news:...
My *personal* preference would be to remove ALL of the USB stuff

(in
Safe
Mode) and then restart to reinstall. I wouldn't feel sure that

things
were
configured properly. Devices that are dependent upon other devices

(USB
hub
dependent on USB controller, peripheral dependent on USB hub, or,

drive
dependent on controller), it's best to reinstall the "child"

device(s)
after
the "parent" device. This is in case the configuration of the

parent
device
was changed, which often requires a change in the configuration of

the
child.

Just exactly what is the topology of your USB? By that I mean

exactly
what
hardware do you have on the system? How many, if any, USB ports

are
onboard
(part of the motherboard, not a plugged in card?) Vice-versa, how

many
are
removable cards? Are some only USB1, with your USB2 added on,
probably as a card? I ask all this because it might be possible to

do
some
extra testing to narrow down the problem. Like, have you tried the

printer
in a USB2 port?


--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks for your prompt reply, Gary. I hope this is not an

annoying
duplicate.
Yes, I did boot to safe mode to look at the device manager.When

you
say
delete all USB items and devices, do you include host

controllers? Do
I
need to do that from safe mode as well? There was also a USB2

device,
which showed only my PDA connection that works. Do I include

that,
too.
If I delete everything, that includes my DSL modem, which is

connected
to a USB port rather than an ethernet card. I sure hope it

reinstalls.

Thanks again.
Don Eagle


----- Original Message -----
From: "Gary S. Terhune"
Newsgroups: microsoft.public.win98.printing
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 9:56 PM
Subject: USB driver problem with Win98SE


I'd not bother to delete the ENUM key or any part thereof

unless
it's
the
whole thing. The primary reason for doing so in the first

place is
that
certain items can't be removed in Device manager -- they can

only be
gotten
rid of (and thus reinstalled) by deleting them in the

Registry. What
I
*would* do is to delete *all* USB items and any devices

connected to
USB,
then reboot and let Windows reinstall (remember to not connect

the
printer
at this time.)

More importantly: Have you taken a look at Device Manager in

Safe
Mode, as I
suggested? Honestly, this is an important step in

trouble-shooting
this kind
of issue. Garbage that gets left in the ENUM key does not show

up in
Normal
Mode, only in Safe Mode. The only devices that show up in

Normal
Mode
are
those that got loaded or detected during the current startup

(Unknown
and
Problem devices included.) Safe Mode shows ALL of the ENUM key

items.

You get to Safe Mode by repeatedly tapping the F8 or Ctrl key

during
startup, which chould cause a Startup Menu to appear.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks to both you, Gary, and Mary Sauer for replying.
The link Mary posted refers me to delete 2 files that are

not on
my
computer. I think they are probably part of WinME. The link

says
Microsoft no longer supports Win98SE and refers me to HP,

which so
far
has not helped.
Gary, I did wait until prompted before connecting the USB

cable.
I
booted to safe mode and looked at the USB hardware list.

There
were
two
copies each of 2 host controllers, which I left alone.

There were
4
entries of "USB root hub" that I deleted. There were some

single
entries, but they appeared to relate to accessories that are
connected
to the computer. I did not delete them. When I rebooted to

the
normal
mode, the 4 USB root hubs were re-installed. However, the

same
error
ocurred when I tried to install the HP printer. A device

driver
could
not be found on either the hard drive or the software CD.

Thanks for trying. If you have any other suggestions,

please let
me
know. I'm not sure I have the knowledge to get the video to

install
properly if I delete the entire enum key in the registry.

What
would
happen if I delete only the USB key within ENUM?

Don Eagle

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Did you follow instructions precisely and wait until

prompted to
connect the
USB cable? If Windows detects the hardware before the

installer
is
ready for
it, that will frequently cause the installation to fail.

What I
would
do,
just to make sure, is to uninstall the software using

Add/Remove
Programs,
disconnect the printer, remove any mention of the printer

in
Device
Manager,
then reboot. Now run the installation again. If that fails,

then
the
suggestion to rebuild the USB tree is also a decent one and

not
likely
to
cause problems. Yes, there's always the chance, but...

Another thing you might check is Device Manager in Safe

Mode. See
if
there
aren't a lot of duplicated items or items listed that are

no
longer
part of
your system. The legitimate duplications are due to two

pieces of
hardware
actually being identical -- two hard drives of the same

type, for
instance,
or multiple USB host controllers. You can ignore those, but

it's
common in
Windows to see garbage items in Safe Mode DM that you can't

see
in
Normal
Mode, and that garbage can cause problems. Remedies include
selectively
removing duplicated items -- all of them, since you don't

know
which
is your
currently configured entry, including child devices in many
cases --
and
then restarting to have Windows redetect and reinstall. Or,

if
the
garbage
is rampant, the entire ENUM key in the Registry HKLM branch

can
be
deleted,
causing Windows to rebuild the hardware profile from

scratch. The
trickiest
part of that can be getting video to properly install.

If you want comment on the state of your Safe Mode Device

Manager,
post back
with a list of *only* the duplications, they're names and

how
many
of
each.
Only you can know what entries are obsolete, representing

devices
that
are
no longer present.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an HP Photosmart 8250. After disabling

my AV
and
firewall, I tried to install it. Software installs to

the
point
where I
am instructed to connect the printer to the USB port.

Message
"Building
driver information database appears". HP software says

"device
detected", "waiting for setup to finish".
However, Windows says it cannot find the driver on either

my
hard
drive
or the HP CD. Eventually, HP software says "Setup failed

to
complete".
If I let the software finish, it appears, but the

hardware
device
manager lists the printer as "Other Device" and has the

yellow
?.
The
8250 does not appear as a printer. Uninstalling and

retrying
did
not
help. I asked HP for a driver, and they referred me to a

180MB
download
which just duplicates the software on the CD, and has the

same
problem.
Now they want me to delete all USB ports from the device

manager,
and
re-detect and reinstall them. I am very reluctant to do

that
for
fear
of losing all the rest of my peripherals. One other

thing: If
I
click
on "Add a printer" or add hardware in the Control Panel,

I get
a
"RUNDLL32 has performed an illegal operation and will be

shut
down"
I
don't know if that is related to the printer installation

problem
or
not. My USB2 hub is an Adaptec card which works fine

with my
other
peripherals.

Help would be greatly appreciated.

Don Eagle



"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
I'd not bother to delete the ENUM key or any part thereof

unless
it's
the
whole thing. The primary reason for doing so in the first

place is
that
certain items can't be removed in Device manager -- they can

only be
gotten
rid of (and thus reinstalled) by deleting them in the

Registry. What
I
*would* do is to delete *all* USB items and any devices

connected to
USB,
then reboot and let Windows reinstall (remember to not connect

the
printer
at this time.)

More importantly: Have you taken a look at Device Manager in

Safe
Mode, as I
suggested? Honestly, this is an important step in

trouble-shooting
this kind
of issue. Garbage that gets left in the ENUM key does not show

up in
Normal
Mode, only in Safe Mode. The only devices that show up in

Normal
Mode
are
those that got loaded or detected during the current startup

(Unknown
and
Problem devices included.) Safe Mode shows ALL of the ENUM key

items.

You get to Safe Mode by repeatedly tapping the F8 or Ctrl key

during
startup, which chould cause a Startup Menu to appear.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks to both you, Gary, and Mary Sauer for replying.
The link Mary posted refers me to delete 2 files that are

not on
my
computer. I think they are probably part of WinME. The link

says
Microsoft no longer supports Win98SE and refers me to HP,

which so
far
has not helped.
Gary, I did wait until prompted before connecting the USB

cable.
I
booted to safe mode and looked at the USB hardware list.

There
were
two
copies each of 2 host controllers, which I left alone.

There were
4
entries of "USB root hub" that I deleted. There were some

single
entries, but they appeared to relate to accessories that are
connected
to the computer. I did not delete them. When I rebooted to

the
normal
mode, the 4 USB root hubs were re-installed. However, the

same
error
ocurred when I tried to install the HP printer. A device

driver
could
not be found on either the hard drive or the software CD.

Thanks for trying. If you have any other suggestions,

please let
me
know. I'm not sure I have the knowledge to get the video to

install
properly if I delete the entire enum key in the registry.

What
would
happen if I delete only the USB key within ENUM?

Don Eagle

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Did you follow instructions precisely and wait until

prompted to
connect the
USB cable? If Windows detects the hardware before the

installer
is
ready for
it, that will frequently cause the installation to fail.

What I
would
do,
just to make sure, is to uninstall the software using

Add/Remove
Programs,
disconnect the printer, remove any mention of the printer

in
Device
Manager,
then reboot. Now run the installation again. If that fails,

then
the
suggestion to rebuild the USB tree is also a decent one and

not
likely
to
cause problems. Yes, there's always the chance, but...

Another thing you might check is Device Manager in Safe

Mode. See
if
there
aren't a lot of duplicated items or items listed that are

no
longer
part of
your system. The legitimate duplications are due to two

pieces of
hardware
actually being identical -- two hard drives of the same

type, for
instance,
or multiple USB host controllers. You can ignore those, but

it's
common in
Windows to see garbage items in Safe Mode DM that you can't

see
in
Normal
Mode, and that garbage can cause problems. Remedies include
selectively
removing duplicated items -- all of them, since you don't

know
which
is your
currently configured entry, including child devices in many
cases --
and
then restarting to have Windows redetect and reinstall. Or,

if
the
garbage
is rampant, the entire ENUM key in the Registry HKLM branch

can
be
deleted,
causing Windows to rebuild the hardware profile from

scratch. The
trickiest
part of that can be getting video to properly install.

If you want comment on the state of your Safe Mode Device

Manager,
post back
with a list of *only* the duplications, they're names and

how
many
of
each.
Only you can know what entries are obsolete, representing

devices
that
are
no longer present.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an HP Photosmart 8250. After disabling

my AV
and
firewall, I tried to install it. Software installs to

the
point
where I
am instructed to connect the printer to the USB port.

Message
"Building
driver information database appears". HP software says

"device
detected", "waiting for setup to finish".
However, Windows says it cannot find the driver on either

my
hard
drive
or the HP CD. Eventually, HP software says "Setup failed

to
complete".
If I let the software finish, it appears, but the

hardware
device
manager lists the printer as "Other Device" and has the

yellow
?.
The
8250 does not appear as a printer. Uninstalling and

retrying
did
not
help. I asked HP for a driver, and they referred me to a

180MB
download
which just duplicates the software on the CD, and has the

same
problem.
Now they want me to delete all USB ports from the device

manager,
and
re-detect and reinstall them. I am very reluctant to do

that
for
fear
of losing all the rest of my peripherals. One other

thing: If
I
click
on "Add a printer" or add hardware in the Control Panel,

I get
a
"RUNDLL32 has performed an illegal operation and will be

shut
down"
I
don't know if that is related to the printer installation

problem
or
not. My USB2 hub is an Adaptec card which works fine

with my
other
peripherals.

Help would be greatly appreciated.

Don Eagle


















  #12  
Old October 5th 06, 10:20 PM posted to microsoft.public.win98.printing
Gary S. Terhune
External Usenet User
 
Posts: 1,846
Default USB driver problem with Win98SE

Will take some time, perhaps another day, for me to refamiliarize myself
with this case and to add your new info to the mix, do a new search for
possible answers, etc. Please be patient. I won't lose you.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User
http://grystmill.com/articles/cleanboot.htm
http://grystmill.com/articles/security.htm

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Dear Gary, Thanks for all your help. Sorry about the delay in
responding. I had a retreat, and then a family emergency, which has
delayed everything..

My mother board has 2 USB1 ports. I have an Adeptec pci card with 5
USB2 ports; all have worked before. The printer was connected to a USB2
port. I still haven't deleted all USB ports in Safe Mode and tried
reinstalling them.

I went to the site you mentioned, but I do not get the error messages it
shows. I also went to this site:
http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/d...me=c000164 41
I tried solution 3, but it didn't work either. I did have over 1000
files of the form hpz*.* left behind by the installation, which I
deleted before reinstalling.

I used Windows explorer to look at the CD, and the driver folders are
there with files inside them. I also tried not doing the USB connection
during installation, but waiting for the next boot. Windows told me it
had detected new hardware, named it correctly, said it was building a
driver database, and still said it couldn't find the driver. The only
other thing I tried was to look in the registry for the product ID code.
HP at one time told me to delete that key if it were there after
removal. It wasn't. After installation the key was PID_c202. HP's web
site tells me the key should be PID_c102. I don't know if that matters,
and I did not try to edit it. The HP help desk gave me a key for the
wrong printer entirely.

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Clicked Send too soon.

Here's the link:

http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/d...dlc=en&lang=en

TinyURL=http://tinyurl.com/k3qmg

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message news:...
Never mind, I decided to go back to the beginning and review your

case. Is
this the problem you're having? Read it through, OK? There is a

special
section for Win98.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message news:...
My *personal* preference would be to remove ALL of the USB stuff

(in
Safe
Mode) and then restart to reinstall. I wouldn't feel sure that

things
were
configured properly. Devices that are dependent upon other devices

(USB
hub
dependent on USB controller, peripheral dependent on USB hub, or,

drive
dependent on controller), it's best to reinstall the "child"

device(s)
after
the "parent" device. This is in case the configuration of the

parent
device
was changed, which often requires a change in the configuration of

the
child.

Just exactly what is the topology of your USB? By that I mean

exactly
what
hardware do you have on the system? How many, if any, USB ports

are
onboard
(part of the motherboard, not a plugged in card?) Vice-versa, how

many
are
removable cards? Are some only USB1, with your USB2 added on,
probably as a card? I ask all this because it might be possible to

do
some
extra testing to narrow down the problem. Like, have you tried the

printer
in a USB2 port?


--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks for your prompt reply, Gary. I hope this is not an

annoying
duplicate.
Yes, I did boot to safe mode to look at the device manager.When

you
say
delete all USB items and devices, do you include host

controllers? Do
I
need to do that from safe mode as well? There was also a USB2

device,
which showed only my PDA connection that works. Do I include

that,
too.
If I delete everything, that includes my DSL modem, which is

connected
to a USB port rather than an ethernet card. I sure hope it

reinstalls.

Thanks again.
Don Eagle


----- Original Message -----
From: "Gary S. Terhune"
Newsgroups: microsoft.public.win98.printing
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 9:56 PM
Subject: USB driver problem with Win98SE


I'd not bother to delete the ENUM key or any part thereof

unless
it's
the
whole thing. The primary reason for doing so in the first

place is
that
certain items can't be removed in Device manager -- they can

only be
gotten
rid of (and thus reinstalled) by deleting them in the

Registry. What
I
*would* do is to delete *all* USB items and any devices

connected to
USB,
then reboot and let Windows reinstall (remember to not connect

the
printer
at this time.)

More importantly: Have you taken a look at Device Manager in

Safe
Mode, as I
suggested? Honestly, this is an important step in

trouble-shooting
this kind
of issue. Garbage that gets left in the ENUM key does not show

up in
Normal
Mode, only in Safe Mode. The only devices that show up in

Normal
Mode
are
those that got loaded or detected during the current startup

(Unknown
and
Problem devices included.) Safe Mode shows ALL of the ENUM key

items.

You get to Safe Mode by repeatedly tapping the F8 or Ctrl key

during
startup, which chould cause a Startup Menu to appear.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks to both you, Gary, and Mary Sauer for replying.
The link Mary posted refers me to delete 2 files that are

not on
my
computer. I think they are probably part of WinME. The link

says
Microsoft no longer supports Win98SE and refers me to HP,

which so
far
has not helped.
Gary, I did wait until prompted before connecting the USB

cable.
I
booted to safe mode and looked at the USB hardware list.

There
were
two
copies each of 2 host controllers, which I left alone.

There were
4
entries of "USB root hub" that I deleted. There were some

single
entries, but they appeared to relate to accessories that are
connected
to the computer. I did not delete them. When I rebooted to

the
normal
mode, the 4 USB root hubs were re-installed. However, the

same
error
ocurred when I tried to install the HP printer. A device

driver
could
not be found on either the hard drive or the software CD.

Thanks for trying. If you have any other suggestions,

please let
me
know. I'm not sure I have the knowledge to get the video to

install
properly if I delete the entire enum key in the registry.

What
would
happen if I delete only the USB key within ENUM?

Don Eagle

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Did you follow instructions precisely and wait until

prompted to
connect the
USB cable? If Windows detects the hardware before the

installer
is
ready for
it, that will frequently cause the installation to fail.

What I
would
do,
just to make sure, is to uninstall the software using

Add/Remove
Programs,
disconnect the printer, remove any mention of the printer

in
Device
Manager,
then reboot. Now run the installation again. If that fails,

then
the
suggestion to rebuild the USB tree is also a decent one and

not
likely
to
cause problems. Yes, there's always the chance, but...

Another thing you might check is Device Manager in Safe

Mode. See
if
there
aren't a lot of duplicated items or items listed that are

no
longer
part of
your system. The legitimate duplications are due to two

pieces of
hardware
actually being identical -- two hard drives of the same

type, for
instance,
or multiple USB host controllers. You can ignore those, but

it's
common in
Windows to see garbage items in Safe Mode DM that you can't

see
in
Normal
Mode, and that garbage can cause problems. Remedies include
selectively
removing duplicated items -- all of them, since you don't

know
which
is your
currently configured entry, including child devices in many
cases --
and
then restarting to have Windows redetect and reinstall. Or,

if
the
garbage
is rampant, the entire ENUM key in the Registry HKLM branch

can
be
deleted,
causing Windows to rebuild the hardware profile from

scratch. The
trickiest
part of that can be getting video to properly install.

If you want comment on the state of your Safe Mode Device

Manager,
post back
with a list of *only* the duplications, they're names and

how
many
of
each.
Only you can know what entries are obsolete, representing

devices
that
are
no longer present.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an HP Photosmart 8250. After disabling

my AV
and
firewall, I tried to install it. Software installs to

the
point
where I
am instructed to connect the printer to the USB port.

Message
"Building
driver information database appears". HP software says

"device
detected", "waiting for setup to finish".
However, Windows says it cannot find the driver on either

my
hard
drive
or the HP CD. Eventually, HP software says "Setup failed

to
complete".
If I let the software finish, it appears, but the

hardware
device
manager lists the printer as "Other Device" and has the

yellow
?.
The
8250 does not appear as a printer. Uninstalling and

retrying
did
not
help. I asked HP for a driver, and they referred me to a

180MB
download
which just duplicates the software on the CD, and has the

same
problem.
Now they want me to delete all USB ports from the device

manager,
and
re-detect and reinstall them. I am very reluctant to do

that
for
fear
of losing all the rest of my peripherals. One other

thing: If
I
click
on "Add a printer" or add hardware in the Control Panel,

I get
a
"RUNDLL32 has performed an illegal operation and will be

shut
down"
I
don't know if that is related to the printer installation

problem
or
not. My USB2 hub is an Adaptec card which works fine

with my
other
peripherals.

Help would be greatly appreciated.

Don Eagle



"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
I'd not bother to delete the ENUM key or any part thereof

unless
it's
the
whole thing. The primary reason for doing so in the first

place is
that
certain items can't be removed in Device manager -- they can

only be
gotten
rid of (and thus reinstalled) by deleting them in the

Registry. What
I
*would* do is to delete *all* USB items and any devices

connected to
USB,
then reboot and let Windows reinstall (remember to not connect

the
printer
at this time.)

More importantly: Have you taken a look at Device Manager in

Safe
Mode, as I
suggested? Honestly, this is an important step in

trouble-shooting
this kind
of issue. Garbage that gets left in the ENUM key does not show

up in
Normal
Mode, only in Safe Mode. The only devices that show up in

Normal
Mode
are
those that got loaded or detected during the current startup

(Unknown
and
Problem devices included.) Safe Mode shows ALL of the ENUM key

items.

You get to Safe Mode by repeatedly tapping the F8 or Ctrl key

during
startup, which chould cause a Startup Menu to appear.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks to both you, Gary, and Mary Sauer for replying.
The link Mary posted refers me to delete 2 files that are

not on
my
computer. I think they are probably part of WinME. The link

says
Microsoft no longer supports Win98SE and refers me to HP,

which so
far
has not helped.
Gary, I did wait until prompted before connecting the USB

cable.
I
booted to safe mode and looked at the USB hardware list.

There
were
two
copies each of 2 host controllers, which I left alone.

There were
4
entries of "USB root hub" that I deleted. There were some

single
entries, but they appeared to relate to accessories that are
connected
to the computer. I did not delete them. When I rebooted to

the
normal
mode, the 4 USB root hubs were re-installed. However, the

same
error
ocurred when I tried to install the HP printer. A device

driver
could
not be found on either the hard drive or the software CD.

Thanks for trying. If you have any other suggestions,

please let
me
know. I'm not sure I have the knowledge to get the video to

install
properly if I delete the entire enum key in the registry.

What
would
happen if I delete only the USB key within ENUM?

Don Eagle

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Did you follow instructions precisely and wait until

prompted to
connect the
USB cable? If Windows detects the hardware before the

installer
is
ready for
it, that will frequently cause the installation to fail.

What I
would
do,
just to make sure, is to uninstall the software using

Add/Remove
Programs,
disconnect the printer, remove any mention of the printer

in
Device
Manager,
then reboot. Now run the installation again. If that fails,

then
the
suggestion to rebuild the USB tree is also a decent one and

not
likely
to
cause problems. Yes, there's always the chance, but...

Another thing you might check is Device Manager in Safe

Mode. See
if
there
aren't a lot of duplicated items or items listed that are

no
longer
part of
your system. The legitimate duplications are due to two

pieces of
hardware
actually being identical -- two hard drives of the same

type, for
instance,
or multiple USB host controllers. You can ignore those, but

it's
common in
Windows to see garbage items in Safe Mode DM that you can't

see
in
Normal
Mode, and that garbage can cause problems. Remedies include
selectively
removing duplicated items -- all of them, since you don't

know
which
is your
currently configured entry, including child devices in many
cases --
and
then restarting to have Windows redetect and reinstall. Or,

if
the
garbage
is rampant, the entire ENUM key in the Registry HKLM branch

can
be
deleted,
causing Windows to rebuild the hardware profile from

scratch. The
trickiest
part of that can be getting video to properly install.

If you want comment on the state of your Safe Mode Device

Manager,
post back
with a list of *only* the duplications, they're names and

how
many
of
each.
Only you can know what entries are obsolete, representing

devices
that
are
no longer present.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an HP Photosmart 8250. After disabling

my AV
and
firewall, I tried to install it. Software installs to

the
point
where I
am instructed to connect the printer to the USB port.

Message
"Building
driver information database appears". HP software says

"device
detected", "waiting for setup to finish".
However, Windows says it cannot find the driver on either

my
hard
drive
or the HP CD. Eventually, HP software says "Setup failed

to
complete".
If I let the software finish, it appears, but the

hardware
device
manager lists the printer as "Other Device" and has the

yellow
?.
The
8250 does not appear as a printer. Uninstalling and

retrying
did
not
help. I asked HP for a driver, and they referred me to a

180MB
download
which just duplicates the software on the CD, and has the

same
problem.
Now they want me to delete all USB ports from the device

manager,
and
re-detect and reinstall them. I am very reluctant to do

that
for
fear
of losing all the rest of my peripherals. One other

thing: If
I
click
on "Add a printer" or add hardware in the Control Panel,

I get
a
"RUNDLL32 has performed an illegal operation and will be

shut
down"
I
don't know if that is related to the printer installation

problem
or
not. My USB2 hub is an Adaptec card which works fine

with my
other
peripherals.

Help would be greatly appreciated.

Don Eagle




















  #13  
Old October 10th 06, 12:36 AM posted to microsoft.public.win98.printing
Gary S. Terhune
External Usenet User
 
Posts: 1,846
Default USB driver problem with Win98SE

First, I'm very sorry for the delay. I did, indeed, lose you for a couple of
days. Too many things going on.

Anyway, Wow!, you appear to have gone through it all. I don't *think* the ID
code would make a difference, but it couldn't hurt to try changing it. If it
doesn't help, change it back.

So, we're certain that when you're asked for drivers files you are browsing
to the actual folder that contains them on the CD? Not just pointing at the
root of the CD? The requested files show up in the box when you locate the
correct folder? I guess all I can think of is to do that full rebuild of the
USB tree in DM, followed by another search for remnant files. Beyond that, I
don't know what to say. I'd probably do a few searches in the Registry, one
of those things where I'll know it when I see it. But unless you've got some
experience, it's hard to know what you're looking at.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Dear Gary, Thanks for all your help. Sorry about the delay in
responding. I had a retreat, and then a family emergency, which has
delayed everything..

My mother board has 2 USB1 ports. I have an Adeptec pci card with 5
USB2 ports; all have worked before. The printer was connected to a USB2
port. I still haven't deleted all USB ports in Safe Mode and tried
reinstalling them.

I went to the site you mentioned, but I do not get the error messages it
shows. I also went to this site:

http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/d...me=c000164 41
I tried solution 3, but it didn't work either. I did have over 1000
files of the form hpz*.* left behind by the installation, which I
deleted before reinstalling.

I used Windows explorer to look at the CD, and the driver folders are
there with files inside them. I also tried not doing the USB connection
during installation, but waiting for the next boot. Windows told me it
had detected new hardware, named it correctly, said it was building a
driver database, and still said it couldn't find the driver. The only
other thing I tried was to look in the registry for the product ID code.
HP at one time told me to delete that key if it were there after
removal. It wasn't. After installation the key was PID_c202. HP's web
site tells me the key should be PID_c102. I don't know if that matters,
and I did not try to edit it. The HP help desk gave me a key for the
wrong printer entirely.

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Clicked Send too soon.

Here's the link:


http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/d...dlc=en&lang=en

TinyURL=http://tinyurl.com/k3qmg

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message news:...
Never mind, I decided to go back to the beginning and review your

case. Is
this the problem you're having? Read it through, OK? There is a

special
section for Win98.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message news:...
My *personal* preference would be to remove ALL of the USB stuff

(in
Safe
Mode) and then restart to reinstall. I wouldn't feel sure that

things
were
configured properly. Devices that are dependent upon other devices

(USB
hub
dependent on USB controller, peripheral dependent on USB hub, or,

drive
dependent on controller), it's best to reinstall the "child"

device(s)
after
the "parent" device. This is in case the configuration of the

parent
device
was changed, which often requires a change in the configuration of

the
child.

Just exactly what is the topology of your USB? By that I mean

exactly
what
hardware do you have on the system? How many, if any, USB ports

are
onboard
(part of the motherboard, not a plugged in card?) Vice-versa, how

many
are
removable cards? Are some only USB1, with your USB2 added on,
probably as a card? I ask all this because it might be possible to

do
some
extra testing to narrow down the problem. Like, have you tried the

printer
in a USB2 port?


--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks for your prompt reply, Gary. I hope this is not an

annoying
duplicate.
Yes, I did boot to safe mode to look at the device manager.When

you
say
delete all USB items and devices, do you include host

controllers? Do
I
need to do that from safe mode as well? There was also a USB2

device,
which showed only my PDA connection that works. Do I include

that,
too.
If I delete everything, that includes my DSL modem, which is

connected
to a USB port rather than an ethernet card. I sure hope it

reinstalls.

Thanks again.
Don Eagle


----- Original Message -----
From: "Gary S. Terhune"
Newsgroups: microsoft.public.win98.printing
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 9:56 PM
Subject: USB driver problem with Win98SE


I'd not bother to delete the ENUM key or any part thereof

unless
it's
the
whole thing. The primary reason for doing so in the first

place is
that
certain items can't be removed in Device manager -- they can

only be
gotten
rid of (and thus reinstalled) by deleting them in the

Registry. What
I
*would* do is to delete *all* USB items and any devices

connected to
USB,
then reboot and let Windows reinstall (remember to not connect

the
printer
at this time.)

More importantly: Have you taken a look at Device Manager in

Safe
Mode, as I
suggested? Honestly, this is an important step in

trouble-shooting
this kind
of issue. Garbage that gets left in the ENUM key does not show

up in
Normal
Mode, only in Safe Mode. The only devices that show up in

Normal
Mode
are
those that got loaded or detected during the current startup

(Unknown
and
Problem devices included.) Safe Mode shows ALL of the ENUM key

items.

You get to Safe Mode by repeatedly tapping the F8 or Ctrl key

during
startup, which chould cause a Startup Menu to appear.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks to both you, Gary, and Mary Sauer for replying.
The link Mary posted refers me to delete 2 files that are

not on
my
computer. I think they are probably part of WinME. The link

says
Microsoft no longer supports Win98SE and refers me to HP,

which so
far
has not helped.
Gary, I did wait until prompted before connecting the USB

cable.
I
booted to safe mode and looked at the USB hardware list.

There
were
two
copies each of 2 host controllers, which I left alone.

There were
4
entries of "USB root hub" that I deleted. There were some

single
entries, but they appeared to relate to accessories that are
connected
to the computer. I did not delete them. When I rebooted to

the
normal
mode, the 4 USB root hubs were re-installed. However, the

same
error
ocurred when I tried to install the HP printer. A device

driver
could
not be found on either the hard drive or the software CD.

Thanks for trying. If you have any other suggestions,

please let
me
know. I'm not sure I have the knowledge to get the video to

install
properly if I delete the entire enum key in the registry.

What
would
happen if I delete only the USB key within ENUM?

Don Eagle

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Did you follow instructions precisely and wait until

prompted to
connect the
USB cable? If Windows detects the hardware before the

installer
is
ready for
it, that will frequently cause the installation to fail.

What I
would
do,
just to make sure, is to uninstall the software using

Add/Remove
Programs,
disconnect the printer, remove any mention of the printer

in
Device
Manager,
then reboot. Now run the installation again. If that fails,

then
the
suggestion to rebuild the USB tree is also a decent one and

not
likely
to
cause problems. Yes, there's always the chance, but...

Another thing you might check is Device Manager in Safe

Mode. See
if
there
aren't a lot of duplicated items or items listed that are

no
longer
part of
your system. The legitimate duplications are due to two

pieces of
hardware
actually being identical -- two hard drives of the same

type, for
instance,
or multiple USB host controllers. You can ignore those, but

it's
common in
Windows to see garbage items in Safe Mode DM that you can't

see
in
Normal
Mode, and that garbage can cause problems. Remedies include
selectively
removing duplicated items -- all of them, since you don't

know
which
is your
currently configured entry, including child devices in many
cases --
and
then restarting to have Windows redetect and reinstall. Or,

if
the
garbage
is rampant, the entire ENUM key in the Registry HKLM branch

can
be
deleted,
causing Windows to rebuild the hardware profile from

scratch. The
trickiest
part of that can be getting video to properly install.

If you want comment on the state of your Safe Mode Device

Manager,
post back
with a list of *only* the duplications, they're names and

how
many
of
each.
Only you can know what entries are obsolete, representing

devices
that
are
no longer present.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an HP Photosmart 8250. After disabling

my AV
and
firewall, I tried to install it. Software installs to

the
point
where I
am instructed to connect the printer to the USB port.

Message
"Building
driver information database appears". HP software says

"device
detected", "waiting for setup to finish".
However, Windows says it cannot find the driver on either

my
hard
drive
or the HP CD. Eventually, HP software says "Setup failed

to
complete".
If I let the software finish, it appears, but the

hardware
device
manager lists the printer as "Other Device" and has the

yellow
?.
The
8250 does not appear as a printer. Uninstalling and

retrying
did
not
help. I asked HP for a driver, and they referred me to a

180MB
download
which just duplicates the software on the CD, and has the

same
problem.
Now they want me to delete all USB ports from the device

manager,
and
re-detect and reinstall them. I am very reluctant to do

that
for
fear
of losing all the rest of my peripherals. One other

thing: If
I
click
on "Add a printer" or add hardware in the Control Panel,

I get
a
"RUNDLL32 has performed an illegal operation and will be

shut
down"
I
don't know if that is related to the printer installation

problem
or
not. My USB2 hub is an Adaptec card which works fine

with my
other
peripherals.

Help would be greatly appreciated.

Don Eagle



"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
I'd not bother to delete the ENUM key or any part thereof

unless
it's
the
whole thing. The primary reason for doing so in the first

place is
that
certain items can't be removed in Device manager -- they can

only be
gotten
rid of (and thus reinstalled) by deleting them in the

Registry. What
I
*would* do is to delete *all* USB items and any devices

connected to
USB,
then reboot and let Windows reinstall (remember to not connect

the
printer
at this time.)

More importantly: Have you taken a look at Device Manager in

Safe
Mode, as I
suggested? Honestly, this is an important step in

trouble-shooting
this kind
of issue. Garbage that gets left in the ENUM key does not show

up in
Normal
Mode, only in Safe Mode. The only devices that show up in

Normal
Mode
are
those that got loaded or detected during the current startup

(Unknown
and
Problem devices included.) Safe Mode shows ALL of the ENUM key

items.

You get to Safe Mode by repeatedly tapping the F8 or Ctrl key

during
startup, which chould cause a Startup Menu to appear.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks to both you, Gary, and Mary Sauer for replying.
The link Mary posted refers me to delete 2 files that are

not on
my
computer. I think they are probably part of WinME. The link

says
Microsoft no longer supports Win98SE and refers me to HP,

which so
far
has not helped.
Gary, I did wait until prompted before connecting the USB

cable.
I
booted to safe mode and looked at the USB hardware list.

There
were
two
copies each of 2 host controllers, which I left alone.

There were
4
entries of "USB root hub" that I deleted. There were some

single
entries, but they appeared to relate to accessories that are
connected
to the computer. I did not delete them. When I rebooted to

the
normal
mode, the 4 USB root hubs were re-installed. However, the

same
error
ocurred when I tried to install the HP printer. A device

driver
could
not be found on either the hard drive or the software CD.

Thanks for trying. If you have any other suggestions,

please let
me
know. I'm not sure I have the knowledge to get the video to

install
properly if I delete the entire enum key in the registry.

What
would
happen if I delete only the USB key within ENUM?

Don Eagle

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Did you follow instructions precisely and wait until

prompted to
connect the
USB cable? If Windows detects the hardware before the

installer
is
ready for
it, that will frequently cause the installation to fail.

What I
would
do,
just to make sure, is to uninstall the software using

Add/Remove
Programs,
disconnect the printer, remove any mention of the printer

in
Device
Manager,
then reboot. Now run the installation again. If that fails,

then
the
suggestion to rebuild the USB tree is also a decent one and

not
likely
to
cause problems. Yes, there's always the chance, but...

Another thing you might check is Device Manager in Safe

Mode. See
if
there
aren't a lot of duplicated items or items listed that are

no
longer
part of
your system. The legitimate duplications are due to two

pieces of
hardware
actually being identical -- two hard drives of the same

type, for
instance,
or multiple USB host controllers. You can ignore those, but

it's
common in
Windows to see garbage items in Safe Mode DM that you can't

see
in
Normal
Mode, and that garbage can cause problems. Remedies include
selectively
removing duplicated items -- all of them, since you don't

know
which
is your
currently configured entry, including child devices in many
cases --
and
then restarting to have Windows redetect and reinstall. Or,

if
the
garbage
is rampant, the entire ENUM key in the Registry HKLM branch

can
be
deleted,
causing Windows to rebuild the hardware profile from

scratch. The
trickiest
part of that can be getting video to properly install.

If you want comment on the state of your Safe Mode Device

Manager,
post back
with a list of *only* the duplications, they're names and

how
many
of
each.
Only you can know what entries are obsolete, representing

devices
that
are
no longer present.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an HP Photosmart 8250. After disabling

my AV
and
firewall, I tried to install it. Software installs to

the
point
where I
am instructed to connect the printer to the USB port.

Message
"Building
driver information database appears". HP software says

"device
detected", "waiting for setup to finish".
However, Windows says it cannot find the driver on either

my
hard
drive
or the HP CD. Eventually, HP software says "Setup failed

to
complete".
If I let the software finish, it appears, but the

hardware
device
manager lists the printer as "Other Device" and has the

yellow
?.
The
8250 does not appear as a printer. Uninstalling and

retrying
did
not
help. I asked HP for a driver, and they referred me to a

180MB
download
which just duplicates the software on the CD, and has the

same
problem.
Now they want me to delete all USB ports from the device

manager,
and
re-detect and reinstall them. I am very reluctant to do

that
for
fear
of losing all the rest of my peripherals. One other

thing: If
I
click
on "Add a printer" or add hardware in the Control Panel,

I get
a
"RUNDLL32 has performed an illegal operation and will be

shut
down"
I
don't know if that is related to the printer installation

problem
or
not. My USB2 hub is an Adaptec card which works fine

with my
other
peripherals.

Help would be greatly appreciated.

Don Eagle




















  #14  
Old October 21st 06, 04:46 AM posted to microsoft.public.win98.printing
Don Eagle
External Usenet User
 
Posts: 5
Default USB driver problem with Win98SE

Gary, you have nothing to be sorry about. You are doing me a favor by
helping. Besides, it takes me longer to respond than you, although this
is my second attempt. The first was lost. I tried asking for the
drivers both from the root directory and the folder in which they
reside; Neither worked. I did edit the registry key, but that was
ignored. The software just put its own key in the registry. I don't
have enough experience to do serious registry manipulation. When it put
in its own key, I had disabled all items in the start-up menu, installed
the software without connecting to the printer, edited the registry,
then rebooted after connecting the printer. I got the same story as
before. New hardware detected, correctly named, driver database built,
but driver not found. I have spent enough time on this now that even my
wife says it is time to buy a new computer. So that is what I have
done. I have ordered a new system that should be ready by the time I
get back to town next week. Maybe XP Home will work better with the HP
8250.

Thanks again for all your help.

Don


"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
First, I'm very sorry for the delay. I did, indeed, lose you for a

couple of
days. Too many things going on.

Anyway, Wow!, you appear to have gone through it all. I don't *think*

the ID
code would make a difference, but it couldn't hurt to try changing it.

If it
doesn't help, change it back.

So, we're certain that when you're asked for drivers files you are

browsing
to the actual folder that contains them on the CD? Not just pointing

at the
root of the CD? The requested files show up in the box when you locate

the
correct folder? I guess all I can think of is to do that full rebuild

of the
USB tree in DM, followed by another search for remnant files. Beyond

that, I
don't know what to say. I'd probably do a few searches in the

Registry, one
of those things where I'll know it when I see it. But unless you've

got some
experience, it's hard to know what you're looking at.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Dear Gary, Thanks for all your help. Sorry about the delay in
responding. I had a retreat, and then a family emergency, which has
delayed everything..

My mother board has 2 USB1 ports. I have an Adeptec pci card with 5
USB2 ports; all have worked before. The printer was connected to a

USB2
port. I still haven't deleted all USB ports in Safe Mode and tried
reinstalling them.

I went to the site you mentioned, but I do not get the error

messages it
shows. I also went to this site:


http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/d...me=c000164 41
I tried solution 3, but it didn't work either. I did have over 1000
files of the form hpz*.* left behind by the installation, which I
deleted before reinstalling.

I used Windows explorer to look at the CD, and the driver folders

are
there with files inside them. I also tried not doing the USB

connection
during installation, but waiting for the next boot. Windows told me

it
had detected new hardware, named it correctly, said it was building

a
driver database, and still said it couldn't find the driver. The

only
other thing I tried was to look in the registry for the product ID

code.
HP at one time told me to delete that key if it were there after
removal. It wasn't. After installation the key was PID_c202. HP's

web
site tells me the key should be PID_c102. I don't know if that

matters,
and I did not try to edit it. The HP help desk gave me a key for

the
wrong printer entirely.

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Clicked Send too soon.

Here's the link:



http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/d...dlc=en&lang=en

TinyURL=http://tinyurl.com/k3qmg

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message news:...
Never mind, I decided to go back to the beginning and review

your
case. Is
this the problem you're having? Read it through, OK? There is a

special
section for Win98.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message news:...
My *personal* preference would be to remove ALL of the USB

stuff
(in
Safe
Mode) and then restart to reinstall. I wouldn't feel sure that

things
were
configured properly. Devices that are dependent upon other

devices
(USB
hub
dependent on USB controller, peripheral dependent on USB hub,

or,
drive
dependent on controller), it's best to reinstall the "child"

device(s)
after
the "parent" device. This is in case the configuration of the

parent
device
was changed, which often requires a change in the

configuration of
the
child.

Just exactly what is the topology of your USB? By that I mean

exactly
what
hardware do you have on the system? How many, if any, USB

ports
are
onboard
(part of the motherboard, not a plugged in card?) Vice-versa,

how
many
are
removable cards? Are some only USB1, with your USB2 added on,
probably as a card? I ask all this because it might be

possible to
do
some
extra testing to narrow down the problem. Like, have you tried

the
printer
in a USB2 port?


--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks for your prompt reply, Gary. I hope this is not an

annoying
duplicate.
Yes, I did boot to safe mode to look at the device

manager.When
you
say
delete all USB items and devices, do you include host

controllers? Do
I
need to do that from safe mode as well? There was also a

USB2
device,
which showed only my PDA connection that works. Do I

include
that,
too.
If I delete everything, that includes my DSL modem, which is

connected
to a USB port rather than an ethernet card. I sure hope it
reinstalls.

Thanks again.
Don Eagle


----- Original Message -----
From: "Gary S. Terhune"
Newsgroups: microsoft.public.win98.printing
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 9:56 PM
Subject: USB driver problem with Win98SE


I'd not bother to delete the ENUM key or any part thereof

unless
it's
the
whole thing. The primary reason for doing so in the first

place is
that
certain items can't be removed in Device manager -- they

can
only be
gotten
rid of (and thus reinstalled) by deleting them in the

Registry. What
I
*would* do is to delete *all* USB items and any devices

connected to
USB,
then reboot and let Windows reinstall (remember to not

connect
the
printer
at this time.)

More importantly: Have you taken a look at Device Manager

in
Safe
Mode, as I
suggested? Honestly, this is an important step in

trouble-shooting
this kind
of issue. Garbage that gets left in the ENUM key does not

show
up in
Normal
Mode, only in Safe Mode. The only devices that show up in

Normal
Mode
are
those that got loaded or detected during the current

startup
(Unknown
and
Problem devices included.) Safe Mode shows ALL of the ENUM

key
items.

You get to Safe Mode by repeatedly tapping the F8 or Ctrl

key
during
startup, which chould cause a Startup Menu to appear.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks to both you, Gary, and Mary Sauer for replying.
The link Mary posted refers me to delete 2 files that

are
not on
my
computer. I think they are probably part of WinME. The

link
says
Microsoft no longer supports Win98SE and refers me to

HP,
which so
far
has not helped.
Gary, I did wait until prompted before connecting the

USB
cable.
I
booted to safe mode and looked at the USB hardware list.

There
were
two
copies each of 2 host controllers, which I left alone.

There were
4
entries of "USB root hub" that I deleted. There were

some
single
entries, but they appeared to relate to accessories that

are
connected
to the computer. I did not delete them. When I

rebooted to
the
normal
mode, the 4 USB root hubs were re-installed. However,

the
same
error
ocurred when I tried to install the HP printer. A

device
driver
could
not be found on either the hard drive or the software

CD.

Thanks for trying. If you have any other suggestions,

please let
me
know. I'm not sure I have the knowledge to get the

video to
install
properly if I delete the entire enum key in the

registry.
What
would
happen if I delete only the USB key within ENUM?

Don Eagle

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Did you follow instructions precisely and wait until

prompted to
connect the
USB cable? If Windows detects the hardware before the

installer
is
ready for
it, that will frequently cause the installation to

fail.
What I
would
do,
just to make sure, is to uninstall the software using

Add/Remove
Programs,
disconnect the printer, remove any mention of the

printer
in
Device
Manager,
then reboot. Now run the installation again. If that

fails,
then
the
suggestion to rebuild the USB tree is also a decent one

and
not
likely
to
cause problems. Yes, there's always the chance, but...

Another thing you might check is Device Manager in Safe

Mode. See
if
there
aren't a lot of duplicated items or items listed that

are
no
longer
part of
your system. The legitimate duplications are due to two

pieces of
hardware
actually being identical -- two hard drives of the same

type, for
instance,
or multiple USB host controllers. You can ignore those,

but
it's
common in
Windows to see garbage items in Safe Mode DM that you

can't
see
in
Normal
Mode, and that garbage can cause problems. Remedies

include
selectively
removing duplicated items -- all of them, since you

don't
know
which
is your
currently configured entry, including child devices in

many
cases --
and
then restarting to have Windows redetect and reinstall.

Or,
if
the
garbage
is rampant, the entire ENUM key in the Registry HKLM

branch
can
be
deleted,
causing Windows to rebuild the hardware profile from

scratch. The
trickiest
part of that can be getting video to properly install.

If you want comment on the state of your Safe Mode

Device
Manager,
post back
with a list of *only* the duplications, they're names

and
how
many
of
each.
Only you can know what entries are obsolete,

representing
devices
that
are
no longer present.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an HP Photosmart 8250. After

disabling
my AV
and
firewall, I tried to install it. Software installs

to
the
point
where I
am instructed to connect the printer to the USB port.

Message
"Building
driver information database appears". HP software

says
"device
detected", "waiting for setup to finish".
However, Windows says it cannot find the driver on

either
my
hard
drive
or the HP CD. Eventually, HP software says "Setup

failed
to
complete".
If I let the software finish, it appears, but the

hardware
device
manager lists the printer as "Other Device" and has

the
yellow
?.
The
8250 does not appear as a printer. Uninstalling and

retrying
did
not
help. I asked HP for a driver, and they referred me

to a
180MB
download
which just duplicates the software on the CD, and has

the
same
problem.
Now they want me to delete all USB ports from the

device
manager,
and
re-detect and reinstall them. I am very reluctant to

do
that
for
fear
of losing all the rest of my peripherals. One other

thing: If
I
click
on "Add a printer" or add hardware in the Control

Panel,
I get
a
"RUNDLL32 has performed an illegal operation and will

be
shut
down"
I
don't know if that is related to the printer

installation
problem
or
not. My USB2 hub is an Adaptec card which works fine

with my
other
peripherals.

Help would be greatly appreciated.

Don Eagle



"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
I'd not bother to delete the ENUM key or any part thereof

unless
it's
the
whole thing. The primary reason for doing so in the first

place is
that
certain items can't be removed in Device manager -- they

can
only be
gotten
rid of (and thus reinstalled) by deleting them in the

Registry. What
I
*would* do is to delete *all* USB items and any devices

connected to
USB,
then reboot and let Windows reinstall (remember to not

connect
the
printer
at this time.)

More importantly: Have you taken a look at Device Manager

in
Safe
Mode, as I
suggested? Honestly, this is an important step in

trouble-shooting
this kind
of issue. Garbage that gets left in the ENUM key does not

show
up in
Normal
Mode, only in Safe Mode. The only devices that show up in

Normal
Mode
are
those that got loaded or detected during the current

startup
(Unknown
and
Problem devices included.) Safe Mode shows ALL of the ENUM

key
items.

You get to Safe Mode by repeatedly tapping the F8 or Ctrl

key
during
startup, which chould cause a Startup Menu to appear.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks to both you, Gary, and Mary Sauer for replying.
The link Mary posted refers me to delete 2 files that

are
not on
my
computer. I think they are probably part of WinME. The

link
says
Microsoft no longer supports Win98SE and refers me to

HP,
which so
far
has not helped.
Gary, I did wait until prompted before connecting the

USB
cable.
I
booted to safe mode and looked at the USB hardware list.

There
were
two
copies each of 2 host controllers, which I left alone.

There were
4
entries of "USB root hub" that I deleted. There were

some
single
entries, but they appeared to relate to accessories that

are
connected
to the computer. I did not delete them. When I

rebooted to
the
normal
mode, the 4 USB root hubs were re-installed. However,

the
same
error
ocurred when I tried to install the HP printer. A

device
driver
could
not be found on either the hard drive or the software

CD.

Thanks for trying. If you have any other suggestions,

please let
me
know. I'm not sure I have the knowledge to get the

video to
install
properly if I delete the entire enum key in the

registry.
What
would
happen if I delete only the USB key within ENUM?

Don Eagle

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Did you follow instructions precisely and wait until

prompted to
connect the
USB cable? If Windows detects the hardware before the

installer
is
ready for
it, that will frequently cause the installation to

fail.
What I
would
do,
just to make sure, is to uninstall the software using

Add/Remove
Programs,
disconnect the printer, remove any mention of the

printer
in
Device
Manager,
then reboot. Now run the installation again. If that

fails,
then
the
suggestion to rebuild the USB tree is also a decent one

and
not
likely
to
cause problems. Yes, there's always the chance, but...

Another thing you might check is Device Manager in Safe

Mode. See
if
there
aren't a lot of duplicated items or items listed that

are
no
longer
part of
your system. The legitimate duplications are due to two

pieces of
hardware
actually being identical -- two hard drives of the same

type, for
instance,
or multiple USB host controllers. You can ignore those,

but
it's
common in
Windows to see garbage items in Safe Mode DM that you

can't
see
in
Normal
Mode, and that garbage can cause problems. Remedies

include
selectively
removing duplicated items -- all of them, since you

don't
know
which
is your
currently configured entry, including child devices in

many
cases --
and
then restarting to have Windows redetect and reinstall.

Or,
if
the
garbage
is rampant, the entire ENUM key in the Registry HKLM

branch
can
be
deleted,
causing Windows to rebuild the hardware profile from

scratch. The
trickiest
part of that can be getting video to properly install.

If you want comment on the state of your Safe Mode

Device
Manager,
post back
with a list of *only* the duplications, they're names

and
how
many
of
each.
Only you can know what entries are obsolete,

representing
devices
that
are
no longer present.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an HP Photosmart 8250. After

disabling
my AV
and
firewall, I tried to install it. Software installs

to
the
point
where I
am instructed to connect the printer to the USB port.

Message
"Building
driver information database appears". HP software

says
"device
detected", "waiting for setup to finish".
However, Windows says it cannot find the driver on

either
my
hard
drive
or the HP CD. Eventually, HP software says "Setup

failed
to
complete".
If I let the software finish, it appears, but the

hardware
device
manager lists the printer as "Other Device" and has

the
yellow
?.
The
8250 does not appear as a printer. Uninstalling and

retrying
did
not
help. I asked HP for a driver, and they referred me

to a
180MB
download
which just duplicates the software on the CD, and has

the
same
problem.
Now they want me to delete all USB ports from the

device
manager,
and
re-detect and reinstall them. I am very reluctant to

do
that
for
fear
of losing all the rest of my peripherals. One other

thing: If
I
click
on "Add a printer" or add hardware in the Control

Panel,
I get
a
"RUNDLL32 has performed an illegal operation and will

be
shut
down"
I
don't know if that is related to the printer

installation
problem
or
not. My USB2 hub is an Adaptec card which works fine

with my
other
peripherals.

Help would be greatly appreciated.

Don Eagle






















  #15  
Old October 21st 06, 05:36 AM posted to microsoft.public.win98.printing
Gary S. Terhune
External Usenet User
 
Posts: 1,846
Default USB driver problem with Win98SE

Ahh, well... We all need a good reason for getting a new computer, right?

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User
http://grystmill.com/articles/cleanboot.htm
http://grystmill.com/articles/security.htm

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Gary, you have nothing to be sorry about. You are doing me a favor by
helping. Besides, it takes me longer to respond than you, although this
is my second attempt. The first was lost. I tried asking for the
drivers both from the root directory and the folder in which they
reside; Neither worked. I did edit the registry key, but that was
ignored. The software just put its own key in the registry. I don't
have enough experience to do serious registry manipulation. When it put
in its own key, I had disabled all items in the start-up menu, installed
the software without connecting to the printer, edited the registry,
then rebooted after connecting the printer. I got the same story as
before. New hardware detected, correctly named, driver database built,
but driver not found. I have spent enough time on this now that even my
wife says it is time to buy a new computer. So that is what I have
done. I have ordered a new system that should be ready by the time I
get back to town next week. Maybe XP Home will work better with the HP
8250.

Thanks again for all your help.

Don


"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
First, I'm very sorry for the delay. I did, indeed, lose you for a

couple of
days. Too many things going on.

Anyway, Wow!, you appear to have gone through it all. I don't *think*

the ID
code would make a difference, but it couldn't hurt to try changing it.

If it
doesn't help, change it back.

So, we're certain that when you're asked for drivers files you are

browsing
to the actual folder that contains them on the CD? Not just pointing

at the
root of the CD? The requested files show up in the box when you locate

the
correct folder? I guess all I can think of is to do that full rebuild

of the
USB tree in DM, followed by another search for remnant files. Beyond

that, I
don't know what to say. I'd probably do a few searches in the

Registry, one
of those things where I'll know it when I see it. But unless you've

got some
experience, it's hard to know what you're looking at.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Dear Gary, Thanks for all your help. Sorry about the delay in
responding. I had a retreat, and then a family emergency, which has
delayed everything..

My mother board has 2 USB1 ports. I have an Adeptec pci card with 5
USB2 ports; all have worked before. The printer was connected to a

USB2
port. I still haven't deleted all USB ports in Safe Mode and tried
reinstalling them.

I went to the site you mentioned, but I do not get the error

messages it
shows. I also went to this site:



http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/d...me=c000164 41
I tried solution 3, but it didn't work either. I did have over 1000
files of the form hpz*.* left behind by the installation, which I
deleted before reinstalling.

I used Windows explorer to look at the CD, and the driver folders

are
there with files inside them. I also tried not doing the USB

connection
during installation, but waiting for the next boot. Windows told me

it
had detected new hardware, named it correctly, said it was building

a
driver database, and still said it couldn't find the driver. The

only
other thing I tried was to look in the registry for the product ID

code.
HP at one time told me to delete that key if it were there after
removal. It wasn't. After installation the key was PID_c202. HP's

web
site tells me the key should be PID_c102. I don't know if that

matters,
and I did not try to edit it. The HP help desk gave me a key for

the
wrong printer entirely.

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Clicked Send too soon.

Here's the link:




http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/d...dlc=en&lang=en

TinyURL=http://tinyurl.com/k3qmg

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message news:...
Never mind, I decided to go back to the beginning and review

your
case. Is
this the problem you're having? Read it through, OK? There is a
special
section for Win98.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message news:...
My *personal* preference would be to remove ALL of the USB

stuff
(in
Safe
Mode) and then restart to reinstall. I wouldn't feel sure that
things
were
configured properly. Devices that are dependent upon other

devices
(USB
hub
dependent on USB controller, peripheral dependent on USB hub,

or,
drive
dependent on controller), it's best to reinstall the "child"
device(s)
after
the "parent" device. This is in case the configuration of the
parent
device
was changed, which often requires a change in the

configuration of
the
child.

Just exactly what is the topology of your USB? By that I mean
exactly
what
hardware do you have on the system? How many, if any, USB

ports
are
onboard
(part of the motherboard, not a plugged in card?) Vice-versa,

how
many
are
removable cards? Are some only USB1, with your USB2 added on,
probably as a card? I ask all this because it might be

possible to
do
some
extra testing to narrow down the problem. Like, have you tried

the
printer
in a USB2 port?


--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks for your prompt reply, Gary. I hope this is not an
annoying
duplicate.
Yes, I did boot to safe mode to look at the device

manager.When
you
say
delete all USB items and devices, do you include host
controllers? Do
I
need to do that from safe mode as well? There was also a

USB2
device,
which showed only my PDA connection that works. Do I

include
that,
too.
If I delete everything, that includes my DSL modem, which is
connected
to a USB port rather than an ethernet card. I sure hope it
reinstalls.

Thanks again.
Don Eagle


----- Original Message -----
From: "Gary S. Terhune"
Newsgroups: microsoft.public.win98.printing
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 9:56 PM
Subject: USB driver problem with Win98SE


I'd not bother to delete the ENUM key or any part thereof
unless
it's
the
whole thing. The primary reason for doing so in the first
place is
that
certain items can't be removed in Device manager -- they

can
only be
gotten
rid of (and thus reinstalled) by deleting them in the
Registry. What
I
*would* do is to delete *all* USB items and any devices
connected to
USB,
then reboot and let Windows reinstall (remember to not

connect
the
printer
at this time.)

More importantly: Have you taken a look at Device Manager

in
Safe
Mode, as I
suggested? Honestly, this is an important step in
trouble-shooting
this kind
of issue. Garbage that gets left in the ENUM key does not

show
up in
Normal
Mode, only in Safe Mode. The only devices that show up in
Normal
Mode
are
those that got loaded or detected during the current

startup
(Unknown
and
Problem devices included.) Safe Mode shows ALL of the ENUM

key
items.

You get to Safe Mode by repeatedly tapping the F8 or Ctrl

key
during
startup, which chould cause a Startup Menu to appear.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks to both you, Gary, and Mary Sauer for replying.
The link Mary posted refers me to delete 2 files that

are
not on
my
computer. I think they are probably part of WinME. The

link
says
Microsoft no longer supports Win98SE and refers me to

HP,
which so
far
has not helped.
Gary, I did wait until prompted before connecting the

USB
cable.
I
booted to safe mode and looked at the USB hardware list.
There
were
two
copies each of 2 host controllers, which I left alone.
There were
4
entries of "USB root hub" that I deleted. There were

some
single
entries, but they appeared to relate to accessories that

are
connected
to the computer. I did not delete them. When I

rebooted to
the
normal
mode, the 4 USB root hubs were re-installed. However,

the
same
error
ocurred when I tried to install the HP printer. A

device
driver
could
not be found on either the hard drive or the software

CD.

Thanks for trying. If you have any other suggestions,
please let
me
know. I'm not sure I have the knowledge to get the

video to
install
properly if I delete the entire enum key in the

registry.
What
would
happen if I delete only the USB key within ENUM?

Don Eagle

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Did you follow instructions precisely and wait until
prompted to
connect the
USB cable? If Windows detects the hardware before the
installer
is
ready for
it, that will frequently cause the installation to

fail.
What I
would
do,
just to make sure, is to uninstall the software using
Add/Remove
Programs,
disconnect the printer, remove any mention of the

printer
in
Device
Manager,
then reboot. Now run the installation again. If that

fails,
then
the
suggestion to rebuild the USB tree is also a decent one

and
not
likely
to
cause problems. Yes, there's always the chance, but...

Another thing you might check is Device Manager in Safe
Mode. See
if
there
aren't a lot of duplicated items or items listed that

are
no
longer
part of
your system. The legitimate duplications are due to two
pieces of
hardware
actually being identical -- two hard drives of the same
type, for
instance,
or multiple USB host controllers. You can ignore those,

but
it's
common in
Windows to see garbage items in Safe Mode DM that you

can't
see
in
Normal
Mode, and that garbage can cause problems. Remedies

include
selectively
removing duplicated items -- all of them, since you

don't
know
which
is your
currently configured entry, including child devices in

many
cases --
and
then restarting to have Windows redetect and reinstall.

Or,
if
the
garbage
is rampant, the entire ENUM key in the Registry HKLM

branch
can
be
deleted,
causing Windows to rebuild the hardware profile from
scratch. The
trickiest
part of that can be getting video to properly install.

If you want comment on the state of your Safe Mode

Device
Manager,
post back
with a list of *only* the duplications, they're names

and
how
many
of
each.
Only you can know what entries are obsolete,

representing
devices
that
are
no longer present.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an HP Photosmart 8250. After

disabling
my AV
and
firewall, I tried to install it. Software installs

to
the
point
where I
am instructed to connect the printer to the USB port.
Message
"Building
driver information database appears". HP software

says
"device
detected", "waiting for setup to finish".
However, Windows says it cannot find the driver on

either
my
hard
drive
or the HP CD. Eventually, HP software says "Setup

failed
to
complete".
If I let the software finish, it appears, but the
hardware
device
manager lists the printer as "Other Device" and has

the
yellow
?.
The
8250 does not appear as a printer. Uninstalling and
retrying
did
not
help. I asked HP for a driver, and they referred me

to a
180MB
download
which just duplicates the software on the CD, and has

the
same
problem.
Now they want me to delete all USB ports from the

device
manager,
and
re-detect and reinstall them. I am very reluctant to

do
that
for
fear
of losing all the rest of my peripherals. One other
thing: If
I
click
on "Add a printer" or add hardware in the Control

Panel,
I get
a
"RUNDLL32 has performed an illegal operation and will

be
shut
down"
I
don't know if that is related to the printer

installation
problem
or
not. My USB2 hub is an Adaptec card which works fine
with my
other
peripherals.

Help would be greatly appreciated.

Don Eagle



"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
I'd not bother to delete the ENUM key or any part thereof
unless
it's
the
whole thing. The primary reason for doing so in the first
place is
that
certain items can't be removed in Device manager -- they

can
only be
gotten
rid of (and thus reinstalled) by deleting them in the
Registry. What
I
*would* do is to delete *all* USB items and any devices
connected to
USB,
then reboot and let Windows reinstall (remember to not

connect
the
printer
at this time.)

More importantly: Have you taken a look at Device Manager

in
Safe
Mode, as I
suggested? Honestly, this is an important step in
trouble-shooting
this kind
of issue. Garbage that gets left in the ENUM key does not

show
up in
Normal
Mode, only in Safe Mode. The only devices that show up in
Normal
Mode
are
those that got loaded or detected during the current

startup
(Unknown
and
Problem devices included.) Safe Mode shows ALL of the ENUM

key
items.

You get to Safe Mode by repeatedly tapping the F8 or Ctrl

key
during
startup, which chould cause a Startup Menu to appear.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks to both you, Gary, and Mary Sauer for replying.
The link Mary posted refers me to delete 2 files that

are
not on
my
computer. I think they are probably part of WinME. The

link
says
Microsoft no longer supports Win98SE and refers me to

HP,
which so
far
has not helped.
Gary, I did wait until prompted before connecting the

USB
cable.
I
booted to safe mode and looked at the USB hardware list.
There
were
two
copies each of 2 host controllers, which I left alone.
There were
4
entries of "USB root hub" that I deleted. There were

some
single
entries, but they appeared to relate to accessories that

are
connected
to the computer. I did not delete them. When I

rebooted to
the
normal
mode, the 4 USB root hubs were re-installed. However,

the
same
error
ocurred when I tried to install the HP printer. A

device
driver
could
not be found on either the hard drive or the software

CD.

Thanks for trying. If you have any other suggestions,
please let
me
know. I'm not sure I have the knowledge to get the

video to
install
properly if I delete the entire enum key in the

registry.
What
would
happen if I delete only the USB key within ENUM?

Don Eagle

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Did you follow instructions precisely and wait until
prompted to
connect the
USB cable? If Windows detects the hardware before the
installer
is
ready for
it, that will frequently cause the installation to

fail.
What I
would
do,
just to make sure, is to uninstall the software using
Add/Remove
Programs,
disconnect the printer, remove any mention of the

printer
in
Device
Manager,
then reboot. Now run the installation again. If that

fails,
then
the
suggestion to rebuild the USB tree is also a decent one

and
not
likely
to
cause problems. Yes, there's always the chance, but...

Another thing you might check is Device Manager in Safe
Mode. See
if
there
aren't a lot of duplicated items or items listed that

are
no
longer
part of
your system. The legitimate duplications are due to two
pieces of
hardware
actually being identical -- two hard drives of the same
type, for
instance,
or multiple USB host controllers. You can ignore those,

but
it's
common in
Windows to see garbage items in Safe Mode DM that you

can't
see
in
Normal
Mode, and that garbage can cause problems. Remedies

include
selectively
removing duplicated items -- all of them, since you

don't
know
which
is your
currently configured entry, including child devices in

many
cases --
and
then restarting to have Windows redetect and reinstall.

Or,
if
the
garbage
is rampant, the entire ENUM key in the Registry HKLM

branch
can
be
deleted,
causing Windows to rebuild the hardware profile from
scratch. The
trickiest
part of that can be getting video to properly install.

If you want comment on the state of your Safe Mode

Device
Manager,
post back
with a list of *only* the duplications, they're names

and
how
many
of
each.
Only you can know what entries are obsolete,

representing
devices
that
are
no longer present.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an HP Photosmart 8250. After

disabling
my AV
and
firewall, I tried to install it. Software installs

to
the
point
where I
am instructed to connect the printer to the USB port.
Message
"Building
driver information database appears". HP software

says
"device
detected", "waiting for setup to finish".
However, Windows says it cannot find the driver on

either
my
hard
drive
or the HP CD. Eventually, HP software says "Setup

failed
to
complete".
If I let the software finish, it appears, but the
hardware
device
manager lists the printer as "Other Device" and has

the
yellow
?.
The
8250 does not appear as a printer. Uninstalling and
retrying
did
not
help. I asked HP for a driver, and they referred me

to a
180MB
download
which just duplicates the software on the CD, and has

the
same
problem.
Now they want me to delete all USB ports from the

device
manager,
and
re-detect and reinstall them. I am very reluctant to

do
that
for
fear
of losing all the rest of my peripherals. One other
thing: If
I
click
on "Add a printer" or add hardware in the Control

Panel,
I get
a
"RUNDLL32 has performed an illegal operation and will

be
shut
down"
I
don't know if that is related to the printer

installation
problem
or
not. My USB2 hub is an Adaptec card which works fine
with my
other
peripherals.

Help would be greatly appreciated.

Don Eagle
























  #16  
Old October 29th 06, 07:00 PM posted to microsoft.public.win98.printing
Donald Eagle
External Usenet User
 
Posts: 1
Default USB driver problem with Win98SE

Just as a coda to the above: The printer installed without incident under
XP on the new machine.

Don

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Ahh, well... We all need a good reason for getting a new computer, right?

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User
http://grystmill.com/articles/cleanboot.htm
http://grystmill.com/articles/security.htm

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Gary, you have nothing to be sorry about. You are doing me a favor by
helping. Besides, it takes me longer to respond than you, although this
is my second attempt. The first was lost. I tried asking for the
drivers both from the root directory and the folder in which they
reside; Neither worked. I did edit the registry key, but that was
ignored. The software just put its own key in the registry. I don't
have enough experience to do serious registry manipulation. When it put
in its own key, I had disabled all items in the start-up menu, installed
the software without connecting to the printer, edited the registry,
then rebooted after connecting the printer. I got the same story as
before. New hardware detected, correctly named, driver database built,
but driver not found. I have spent enough time on this now that even my
wife says it is time to buy a new computer. So that is what I have
done. I have ordered a new system that should be ready by the time I
get back to town next week. Maybe XP Home will work better with the HP
8250.

Thanks again for all your help.

Don


"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
First, I'm very sorry for the delay. I did, indeed, lose you for a

couple of
days. Too many things going on.

Anyway, Wow!, you appear to have gone through it all. I don't *think*

the ID
code would make a difference, but it couldn't hurt to try changing it.

If it
doesn't help, change it back.

So, we're certain that when you're asked for drivers files you are

browsing
to the actual folder that contains them on the CD? Not just pointing

at the
root of the CD? The requested files show up in the box when you locate

the
correct folder? I guess all I can think of is to do that full rebuild

of the
USB tree in DM, followed by another search for remnant files. Beyond

that, I
don't know what to say. I'd probably do a few searches in the

Registry, one
of those things where I'll know it when I see it. But unless you've

got some
experience, it's hard to know what you're looking at.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Dear Gary, Thanks for all your help. Sorry about the delay in
responding. I had a retreat, and then a family emergency, which has
delayed everything..

My mother board has 2 USB1 ports. I have an Adeptec pci card with 5
USB2 ports; all have worked before. The printer was connected to a

USB2
port. I still haven't deleted all USB ports in Safe Mode and tried
reinstalling them.

I went to the site you mentioned, but I do not get the error

messages it
shows. I also went to this site:



http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/d...me=c000164 41
I tried solution 3, but it didn't work either. I did have over 1000
files of the form hpz*.* left behind by the installation, which I
deleted before reinstalling.

I used Windows explorer to look at the CD, and the driver folders

are
there with files inside them. I also tried not doing the USB

connection
during installation, but waiting for the next boot. Windows told me

it
had detected new hardware, named it correctly, said it was building

a
driver database, and still said it couldn't find the driver. The

only
other thing I tried was to look in the registry for the product ID

code.
HP at one time told me to delete that key if it were there after
removal. It wasn't. After installation the key was PID_c202. HP's

web
site tells me the key should be PID_c102. I don't know if that

matters,
and I did not try to edit it. The HP help desk gave me a key for

the
wrong printer entirely.

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Clicked Send too soon.

Here's the link:




http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/d...dlc=en&lang=en

TinyURL=http://tinyurl.com/k3qmg

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message news:...
Never mind, I decided to go back to the beginning and review

your
case. Is
this the problem you're having? Read it through, OK? There is a
special
section for Win98.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message news:...
My *personal* preference would be to remove ALL of the USB

stuff
(in
Safe
Mode) and then restart to reinstall. I wouldn't feel sure that
things
were
configured properly. Devices that are dependent upon other

devices
(USB
hub
dependent on USB controller, peripheral dependent on USB hub,

or,
drive
dependent on controller), it's best to reinstall the "child"
device(s)
after
the "parent" device. This is in case the configuration of the
parent
device
was changed, which often requires a change in the

configuration of
the
child.

Just exactly what is the topology of your USB? By that I mean
exactly
what
hardware do you have on the system? How many, if any, USB

ports
are
onboard
(part of the motherboard, not a plugged in card?) Vice-versa,

how
many
are
removable cards? Are some only USB1, with your USB2 added on,
probably as a card? I ask all this because it might be

possible to
do
some
extra testing to narrow down the problem. Like, have you tried

the
printer
in a USB2 port?


--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks for your prompt reply, Gary. I hope this is not an
annoying
duplicate.
Yes, I did boot to safe mode to look at the device

manager.When
you
say
delete all USB items and devices, do you include host
controllers? Do
I
need to do that from safe mode as well? There was also a

USB2
device,
which showed only my PDA connection that works. Do I

include
that,
too.
If I delete everything, that includes my DSL modem, which is
connected
to a USB port rather than an ethernet card. I sure hope it
reinstalls.

Thanks again.
Don Eagle


----- Original Message -----
From: "Gary S. Terhune"
Newsgroups: microsoft.public.win98.printing
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 9:56 PM
Subject: USB driver problem with Win98SE


I'd not bother to delete the ENUM key or any part thereof
unless
it's
the
whole thing. The primary reason for doing so in the first
place is
that
certain items can't be removed in Device manager -- they

can
only be
gotten
rid of (and thus reinstalled) by deleting them in the
Registry. What
I
*would* do is to delete *all* USB items and any devices
connected to
USB,
then reboot and let Windows reinstall (remember to not

connect
the
printer
at this time.)

More importantly: Have you taken a look at Device Manager

in
Safe
Mode, as I
suggested? Honestly, this is an important step in
trouble-shooting
this kind
of issue. Garbage that gets left in the ENUM key does not

show
up in
Normal
Mode, only in Safe Mode. The only devices that show up in
Normal
Mode
are
those that got loaded or detected during the current

startup
(Unknown
and
Problem devices included.) Safe Mode shows ALL of the ENUM

key
items.

You get to Safe Mode by repeatedly tapping the F8 or Ctrl

key
during
startup, which chould cause a Startup Menu to appear.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks to both you, Gary, and Mary Sauer for replying.
The link Mary posted refers me to delete 2 files that

are
not on
my
computer. I think they are probably part of WinME. The

link
says
Microsoft no longer supports Win98SE and refers me to

HP,
which so
far
has not helped.
Gary, I did wait until prompted before connecting the

USB
cable.
I
booted to safe mode and looked at the USB hardware list.
There
were
two
copies each of 2 host controllers, which I left alone.
There were
4
entries of "USB root hub" that I deleted. There were

some
single
entries, but they appeared to relate to accessories that

are
connected
to the computer. I did not delete them. When I

rebooted to
the
normal
mode, the 4 USB root hubs were re-installed. However,

the
same
error
ocurred when I tried to install the HP printer. A

device
driver
could
not be found on either the hard drive or the software

CD.

Thanks for trying. If you have any other suggestions,
please let
me
know. I'm not sure I have the knowledge to get the

video to
install
properly if I delete the entire enum key in the

registry.
What
would
happen if I delete only the USB key within ENUM?

Don Eagle

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Did you follow instructions precisely and wait until
prompted to
connect the
USB cable? If Windows detects the hardware before the
installer
is
ready for
it, that will frequently cause the installation to

fail.
What I
would
do,
just to make sure, is to uninstall the software using
Add/Remove
Programs,
disconnect the printer, remove any mention of the

printer
in
Device
Manager,
then reboot. Now run the installation again. If that

fails,
then
the
suggestion to rebuild the USB tree is also a decent one

and
not
likely
to
cause problems. Yes, there's always the chance, but...

Another thing you might check is Device Manager in Safe
Mode. See
if
there
aren't a lot of duplicated items or items listed that

are
no
longer
part of
your system. The legitimate duplications are due to two
pieces of
hardware
actually being identical -- two hard drives of the same
type, for
instance,
or multiple USB host controllers. You can ignore those,

but
it's
common in
Windows to see garbage items in Safe Mode DM that you

can't
see
in
Normal
Mode, and that garbage can cause problems. Remedies

include
selectively
removing duplicated items -- all of them, since you

don't
know
which
is your
currently configured entry, including child devices in

many
cases --
and
then restarting to have Windows redetect and reinstall.

Or,
if
the
garbage
is rampant, the entire ENUM key in the Registry HKLM

branch
can
be
deleted,
causing Windows to rebuild the hardware profile from
scratch. The
trickiest
part of that can be getting video to properly install.

If you want comment on the state of your Safe Mode

Device
Manager,
post back
with a list of *only* the duplications, they're names

and
how
many
of
each.
Only you can know what entries are obsolete,

representing
devices
that
are
no longer present.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an HP Photosmart 8250. After

disabling
my AV
and
firewall, I tried to install it. Software installs

to
the
point
where I
am instructed to connect the printer to the USB port.
Message
"Building
driver information database appears". HP software

says
"device
detected", "waiting for setup to finish".
However, Windows says it cannot find the driver on

either
my
hard
drive
or the HP CD. Eventually, HP software says "Setup

failed
to
complete".
If I let the software finish, it appears, but the
hardware
device
manager lists the printer as "Other Device" and has

the
yellow
?.
The
8250 does not appear as a printer. Uninstalling and
retrying
did
not
help. I asked HP for a driver, and they referred me

to a
180MB
download
which just duplicates the software on the CD, and has

the
same
problem.
Now they want me to delete all USB ports from the

device
manager,
and
re-detect and reinstall them. I am very reluctant to

do
that
for
fear
of losing all the rest of my peripherals. One other
thing: If
I
click
on "Add a printer" or add hardware in the Control

Panel,
I get
a
"RUNDLL32 has performed an illegal operation and will

be
shut
down"
I
don't know if that is related to the printer

installation
problem
or
not. My USB2 hub is an Adaptec card which works fine
with my
other
peripherals.

Help would be greatly appreciated.

Don Eagle



"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
I'd not bother to delete the ENUM key or any part thereof
unless
it's
the
whole thing. The primary reason for doing so in the first
place is
that
certain items can't be removed in Device manager -- they

can
only be
gotten
rid of (and thus reinstalled) by deleting them in the
Registry. What
I
*would* do is to delete *all* USB items and any devices
connected to
USB,
then reboot and let Windows reinstall (remember to not

connect
the
printer
at this time.)

More importantly: Have you taken a look at Device Manager

in
Safe
Mode, as I
suggested? Honestly, this is an important step in
trouble-shooting
this kind
of issue. Garbage that gets left in the ENUM key does not

show
up in
Normal
Mode, only in Safe Mode. The only devices that show up in
Normal
Mode
are
those that got loaded or detected during the current

startup
(Unknown
and
Problem devices included.) Safe Mode shows ALL of the ENUM

key
items.

You get to Safe Mode by repeatedly tapping the F8 or Ctrl

key
during
startup, which chould cause a Startup Menu to appear.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks to both you, Gary, and Mary Sauer for replying.
The link Mary posted refers me to delete 2 files that

are
not on
my
computer. I think they are probably part of WinME. The

link
says
Microsoft no longer supports Win98SE and refers me to

HP,
which so
far
has not helped.
Gary, I did wait until prompted before connecting the

USB
cable.
I
booted to safe mode and looked at the USB hardware list.
There
were
two
copies each of 2 host controllers, which I left alone.
There were
4
entries of "USB root hub" that I deleted. There were

some
single
entries, but they appeared to relate to accessories that

are
connected
to the computer. I did not delete them. When I

rebooted to
the
normal
mode, the 4 USB root hubs were re-installed. However,

the
same
error
ocurred when I tried to install the HP printer. A

device
driver
could
not be found on either the hard drive or the software

CD.

Thanks for trying. If you have any other suggestions,
please let
me
know. I'm not sure I have the knowledge to get the

video to
install
properly if I delete the entire enum key in the

registry.
What
would
happen if I delete only the USB key within ENUM?

Don Eagle

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Did you follow instructions precisely and wait until
prompted to
connect the
USB cable? If Windows detects the hardware before the
installer
is
ready for
it, that will frequently cause the installation to

fail.
What I
would
do,
just to make sure, is to uninstall the software using
Add/Remove
Programs,
disconnect the printer, remove any mention of the

printer
in
Device
Manager,
then reboot. Now run the installation again. If that

fails,
then
the
suggestion to rebuild the USB tree is also a decent one

and
not
likely
to
cause problems. Yes, there's always the chance, but...

Another thing you might check is Device Manager in Safe
Mode. See
if
there
aren't a lot of duplicated items or items listed that

are
no
longer
part of
your system. The legitimate duplications are due to two
pieces of
hardware
actually being identical -- two hard drives of the same
type, for
instance,
or multiple USB host controllers. You can ignore those,

but
it's
common in
Windows to see garbage items in Safe Mode DM that you

can't
see
in
Normal
Mode, and that garbage can cause problems. Remedies

include
selectively
removing duplicated items -- all of them, since you

don't
know
which
is your
currently configured entry, including child devices in

many
cases --
and
then restarting to have Windows redetect and reinstall.

Or,
if
the
garbage
is rampant, the entire ENUM key in the Registry HKLM

branch
can
be
deleted,
causing Windows to rebuild the hardware profile from
scratch. The
trickiest
part of that can be getting video to properly install.

If you want comment on the state of your Safe Mode

Device
Manager,
post back
with a list of *only* the duplications, they're names

and
how
many
of
each.
Only you can know what entries are obsolete,

representing
devices
that
are
no longer present.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an HP Photosmart 8250. After

disabling
my AV
and
firewall, I tried to install it. Software installs

to
the
point
where I
am instructed to connect the printer to the USB port.
Message
"Building
driver information database appears". HP software

says
"device
detected", "waiting for setup to finish".
However, Windows says it cannot find the driver on

either
my
hard
drive
or the HP CD. Eventually, HP software says "Setup

failed
to
complete".
If I let the software finish, it appears, but the
hardware
device
manager lists the printer as "Other Device" and has

the
yellow
?.
The
8250 does not appear as a printer. Uninstalling and
retrying
did
not
help. I asked HP for a driver, and they referred me

to a
180MB
download
which just duplicates the software on the CD, and has

the
same
problem.
Now they want me to delete all USB ports from the

device
manager,
and
re-detect and reinstall them. I am very reluctant to

do
that
for
fear
of losing all the rest of my peripherals. One other
thing: If
I
click
on "Add a printer" or add hardware in the Control

Panel,
I get
a
"RUNDLL32 has performed an illegal operation and will

be
shut
down"
I
don't know if that is related to the printer

installation
problem
or
not. My USB2 hub is an Adaptec card which works fine
with my
other
peripherals.

Help would be greatly appreciated.

Don Eagle


























  #17  
Old October 29th 06, 08:50 PM posted to microsoft.public.win98.printing
Gary S. Terhune
External Usenet User
 
Posts: 1,846
Default USB driver problem with Win98SE

Thanks for the update! Have fun with your new machine, s.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User
http://grystmill.com/articles/cleanboot.htm
http://grystmill.com/articles/security.htm

"Donald Eagle" wrote in message
...
Just as a coda to the above: The printer installed without incident under
XP on the new machine.

Don

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Ahh, well... We all need a good reason for getting a new computer, right?

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User
http://grystmill.com/articles/cleanboot.htm
http://grystmill.com/articles/security.htm

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Gary, you have nothing to be sorry about. You are doing me a favor by
helping. Besides, it takes me longer to respond than you, although this
is my second attempt. The first was lost. I tried asking for the
drivers both from the root directory and the folder in which they
reside; Neither worked. I did edit the registry key, but that was
ignored. The software just put its own key in the registry. I don't
have enough experience to do serious registry manipulation. When it put
in its own key, I had disabled all items in the start-up menu, installed
the software without connecting to the printer, edited the registry,
then rebooted after connecting the printer. I got the same story as
before. New hardware detected, correctly named, driver database built,
but driver not found. I have spent enough time on this now that even my
wife says it is time to buy a new computer. So that is what I have
done. I have ordered a new system that should be ready by the time I
get back to town next week. Maybe XP Home will work better with the HP
8250.

Thanks again for all your help.

Don


"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
First, I'm very sorry for the delay. I did, indeed, lose you for a
couple of
days. Too many things going on.

Anyway, Wow!, you appear to have gone through it all. I don't *think*
the ID
code would make a difference, but it couldn't hurt to try changing it.
If it
doesn't help, change it back.

So, we're certain that when you're asked for drivers files you are
browsing
to the actual folder that contains them on the CD? Not just pointing
at the
root of the CD? The requested files show up in the box when you locate
the
correct folder? I guess all I can think of is to do that full rebuild
of the
USB tree in DM, followed by another search for remnant files. Beyond
that, I
don't know what to say. I'd probably do a few searches in the
Registry, one
of those things where I'll know it when I see it. But unless you've
got some
experience, it's hard to know what you're looking at.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Dear Gary, Thanks for all your help. Sorry about the delay in
responding. I had a retreat, and then a family emergency, which has
delayed everything..

My mother board has 2 USB1 ports. I have an Adeptec pci card with 5
USB2 ports; all have worked before. The printer was connected to a
USB2
port. I still haven't deleted all USB ports in Safe Mode and tried
reinstalling them.

I went to the site you mentioned, but I do not get the error
messages it
shows. I also went to this site:



http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/d...me=c000164 41
I tried solution 3, but it didn't work either. I did have over 1000
files of the form hpz*.* left behind by the installation, which I
deleted before reinstalling.

I used Windows explorer to look at the CD, and the driver folders
are
there with files inside them. I also tried not doing the USB
connection
during installation, but waiting for the next boot. Windows told me
it
had detected new hardware, named it correctly, said it was building
a
driver database, and still said it couldn't find the driver. The
only
other thing I tried was to look in the registry for the product ID
code.
HP at one time told me to delete that key if it were there after
removal. It wasn't. After installation the key was PID_c202. HP's
web
site tells me the key should be PID_c102. I don't know if that
matters,
and I did not try to edit it. The HP help desk gave me a key for
the
wrong printer entirely.

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Clicked Send too soon.

Here's the link:




http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/d...dlc=en&lang=en

TinyURL=http://tinyurl.com/k3qmg

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message news:...
Never mind, I decided to go back to the beginning and review
your
case. Is
this the problem you're having? Read it through, OK? There is a
special
section for Win98.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message news:...
My *personal* preference would be to remove ALL of the USB
stuff
(in
Safe
Mode) and then restart to reinstall. I wouldn't feel sure that
things
were
configured properly. Devices that are dependent upon other
devices
(USB
hub
dependent on USB controller, peripheral dependent on USB hub,
or,
drive
dependent on controller), it's best to reinstall the "child"
device(s)
after
the "parent" device. This is in case the configuration of the
parent
device
was changed, which often requires a change in the
configuration of
the
child.

Just exactly what is the topology of your USB? By that I mean
exactly
what
hardware do you have on the system? How many, if any, USB
ports
are
onboard
(part of the motherboard, not a plugged in card?) Vice-versa,
how
many
are
removable cards? Are some only USB1, with your USB2 added on,
probably as a card? I ask all this because it might be
possible to
do
some
extra testing to narrow down the problem. Like, have you tried
the
printer
in a USB2 port?


--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks for your prompt reply, Gary. I hope this is not an
annoying
duplicate.
Yes, I did boot to safe mode to look at the device
manager.When
you
say
delete all USB items and devices, do you include host
controllers? Do
I
need to do that from safe mode as well? There was also a
USB2
device,
which showed only my PDA connection that works. Do I
include
that,
too.
If I delete everything, that includes my DSL modem, which is
connected
to a USB port rather than an ethernet card. I sure hope it
reinstalls.

Thanks again.
Don Eagle


----- Original Message -----
From: "Gary S. Terhune"
Newsgroups: microsoft.public.win98.printing
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 9:56 PM
Subject: USB driver problem with Win98SE


I'd not bother to delete the ENUM key or any part thereof
unless
it's
the
whole thing. The primary reason for doing so in the first
place is
that
certain items can't be removed in Device manager -- they
can
only be
gotten
rid of (and thus reinstalled) by deleting them in the
Registry. What
I
*would* do is to delete *all* USB items and any devices
connected to
USB,
then reboot and let Windows reinstall (remember to not
connect
the
printer
at this time.)

More importantly: Have you taken a look at Device Manager
in
Safe
Mode, as I
suggested? Honestly, this is an important step in
trouble-shooting
this kind
of issue. Garbage that gets left in the ENUM key does not
show
up in
Normal
Mode, only in Safe Mode. The only devices that show up in
Normal
Mode
are
those that got loaded or detected during the current
startup
(Unknown
and
Problem devices included.) Safe Mode shows ALL of the ENUM
key
items.

You get to Safe Mode by repeatedly tapping the F8 or Ctrl
key
during
startup, which chould cause a Startup Menu to appear.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks to both you, Gary, and Mary Sauer for replying.
The link Mary posted refers me to delete 2 files that
are
not on
my
computer. I think they are probably part of WinME. The
link
says
Microsoft no longer supports Win98SE and refers me to
HP,
which so
far
has not helped.
Gary, I did wait until prompted before connecting the
USB
cable.
I
booted to safe mode and looked at the USB hardware list.
There
were
two
copies each of 2 host controllers, which I left alone.
There were
4
entries of "USB root hub" that I deleted. There were
some
single
entries, but they appeared to relate to accessories that
are
connected
to the computer. I did not delete them. When I
rebooted to
the
normal
mode, the 4 USB root hubs were re-installed. However,
the
same
error
ocurred when I tried to install the HP printer. A
device
driver
could
not be found on either the hard drive or the software
CD.

Thanks for trying. If you have any other suggestions,
please let
me
know. I'm not sure I have the knowledge to get the
video to
install
properly if I delete the entire enum key in the
registry.
What
would
happen if I delete only the USB key within ENUM?

Don Eagle

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Did you follow instructions precisely and wait until
prompted to
connect the
USB cable? If Windows detects the hardware before the
installer
is
ready for
it, that will frequently cause the installation to
fail.
What I
would
do,
just to make sure, is to uninstall the software using
Add/Remove
Programs,
disconnect the printer, remove any mention of the
printer
in
Device
Manager,
then reboot. Now run the installation again. If that
fails,
then
the
suggestion to rebuild the USB tree is also a decent one
and
not
likely
to
cause problems. Yes, there's always the chance, but...

Another thing you might check is Device Manager in Safe
Mode. See
if
there
aren't a lot of duplicated items or items listed that
are
no
longer
part of
your system. The legitimate duplications are due to two
pieces of
hardware
actually being identical -- two hard drives of the same
type, for
instance,
or multiple USB host controllers. You can ignore those,
but
it's
common in
Windows to see garbage items in Safe Mode DM that you
can't
see
in
Normal
Mode, and that garbage can cause problems. Remedies
include
selectively
removing duplicated items -- all of them, since you
don't
know
which
is your
currently configured entry, including child devices in
many
cases --
and
then restarting to have Windows redetect and reinstall.
Or,
if
the
garbage
is rampant, the entire ENUM key in the Registry HKLM
branch
can
be
deleted,
causing Windows to rebuild the hardware profile from
scratch. The
trickiest
part of that can be getting video to properly install.

If you want comment on the state of your Safe Mode
Device
Manager,
post back
with a list of *only* the duplications, they're names
and
how
many
of
each.
Only you can know what entries are obsolete,
representing
devices
that
are
no longer present.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an HP Photosmart 8250. After
disabling
my AV
and
firewall, I tried to install it. Software installs
to
the
point
where I
am instructed to connect the printer to the USB port.
Message
"Building
driver information database appears". HP software
says
"device
detected", "waiting for setup to finish".
However, Windows says it cannot find the driver on
either
my
hard
drive
or the HP CD. Eventually, HP software says "Setup
failed
to
complete".
If I let the software finish, it appears, but the
hardware
device
manager lists the printer as "Other Device" and has
the
yellow
?.
The
8250 does not appear as a printer. Uninstalling and
retrying
did
not
help. I asked HP for a driver, and they referred me
to a
180MB
download
which just duplicates the software on the CD, and has
the
same
problem.
Now they want me to delete all USB ports from the
device
manager,
and
re-detect and reinstall them. I am very reluctant to
do
that
for
fear
of losing all the rest of my peripherals. One other
thing: If
I
click
on "Add a printer" or add hardware in the Control
Panel,
I get
a
"RUNDLL32 has performed an illegal operation and will
be
shut
down"
I
don't know if that is related to the printer
installation
problem
or
not. My USB2 hub is an Adaptec card which works fine
with my
other
peripherals.

Help would be greatly appreciated.

Don Eagle



"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
I'd not bother to delete the ENUM key or any part thereof
unless
it's
the
whole thing. The primary reason for doing so in the first
place is
that
certain items can't be removed in Device manager -- they
can
only be
gotten
rid of (and thus reinstalled) by deleting them in the
Registry. What
I
*would* do is to delete *all* USB items and any devices
connected to
USB,
then reboot and let Windows reinstall (remember to not
connect
the
printer
at this time.)

More importantly: Have you taken a look at Device Manager
in
Safe
Mode, as I
suggested? Honestly, this is an important step in
trouble-shooting
this kind
of issue. Garbage that gets left in the ENUM key does not
show
up in
Normal
Mode, only in Safe Mode. The only devices that show up in
Normal
Mode
are
those that got loaded or detected during the current
startup
(Unknown
and
Problem devices included.) Safe Mode shows ALL of the ENUM
key
items.

You get to Safe Mode by repeatedly tapping the F8 or Ctrl
key
during
startup, which chould cause a Startup Menu to appear.

--

Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
Thanks to both you, Gary, and Mary Sauer for replying.
The link Mary posted refers me to delete 2 files that
are
not on
my
computer. I think they are probably part of WinME. The
link
says
Microsoft no longer supports Win98SE and refers me to
HP,
which so
far
has not helped.
Gary, I did wait until prompted before connecting the
USB
cable.
I
booted to safe mode and looked at the USB hardware list.
There
were
two
copies each of 2 host controllers, which I left alone.
There were
4
entries of "USB root hub" that I deleted. There were
some
single
entries, but they appeared to relate to accessories that
are
connected
to the computer. I did not delete them. When I
rebooted to
the
normal
mode, the 4 USB root hubs were re-installed. However,
the
same
error
ocurred when I tried to install the HP printer. A
device
driver
could
not be found on either the hard drive or the software
CD.

Thanks for trying. If you have any other suggestions,
please let
me
know. I'm not sure I have the knowledge to get the
video to
install
properly if I delete the entire enum key in the
registry.
What
would
happen if I delete only the USB key within ENUM?

Don Eagle

"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Did you follow instructions precisely and wait until
prompted to
connect the
USB cable? If Windows detects the hardware before the
installer
is
ready for
it, that will frequently cause the installation to
fail.
What I
would
do,
just to make sure, is to uninstall the software using
Add/Remove
Programs,
disconnect the printer, remove any mention of the
printer
in
Device
Manager,
then reboot. Now run the installation again. If that
fails,
then
the
suggestion to rebuild the USB tree is also a decent one
and
not
likely
to
cause problems. Yes, there's always the chance, but...

Another thing you might check is Device Manager in Safe
Mode. See
if
there
aren't a lot of duplicated items or items listed that
are
no
longer
part of
your system. The legitimate duplications are due to two
pieces of
hardware
actually being identical -- two hard drives of the same
type, for
instance,
or multiple USB host controllers. You can ignore those,
but
it's
common in
Windows to see garbage items in Safe Mode DM that you
can't
see
in
Normal
Mode, and that garbage can cause problems. Remedies
include
selectively
removing duplicated items -- all of them, since you
don't
know
which
is your
currently configured entry, including child devices in
many
cases --
and
then restarting to have Windows redetect and reinstall.
Or,
if
the
garbage
is rampant, the entire ENUM key in the Registry HKLM
branch
can
be
deleted,
causing Windows to rebuild the hardware profile from
scratch. The
trickiest
part of that can be getting video to properly install.

If you want comment on the state of your Safe Mode
Device
Manager,
post back
with a list of *only* the duplications, they're names
and
how
many
of
each.
Only you can know what entries are obsolete,
representing
devices
that
are
no longer present.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS MVP Shell/User

"Don Eagle" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an HP Photosmart 8250. After
disabling
my AV
and
firewall, I tried to install it. Software installs
to
the
point
where I
am instructed to connect the printer to the USB port.
Message
"Building
driver information database appears". HP software
says
"device
detected", "waiting for setup to finish".
However, Windows says it cannot find the driver on
either
my
hard
drive
or the HP CD. Eventually, HP software says "Setup
failed
to
complete".
If I let the software finish, it appears, but the
hardware
device
manager lists the printer as "Other Device" and has
the
yellow
?.
The
8250 does not appear as a printer. Uninstalling and
retrying
did
not
help. I asked HP for a driver, and they referred me
to a
180MB
download
which just duplicates the software on the CD, and has
the
same
problem.
Now they want me to delete all USB ports from the
device
manager,
and
re-detect and reinstall them. I am very reluctant to
do
that
for
fear
of losing all the rest of my peripherals. One other
thing: If
I
click
on "Add a printer" or add hardware in the Control
Panel,
I get
a
"RUNDLL32 has performed an illegal operation and will
be
shut
down"
I
don't know if that is related to the printer
installation
problem
or
not. My USB2 hub is an Adaptec card which works fine
with my
other
peripherals.

Help would be greatly appreciated.

Don Eagle




























 




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