Windows BBS The Place for Microsoft Windows Support! Windows, Support, Help Site

Go Back   Windows BBS > Operating Systems > Windows Vista

Windows Vista Post your Windows Vista related questions here.

Register your FREE account to unlock additional features at WindowsBBS.com
Register
Welcome to WindowsBBS.com
Microsoft Windows Support

Mission Statement

WindowsBBS is an online community dedicated to easily accessible technical support for those using Microsoft operating systems and other Windows software.

Our goal is to become the leading resource for computer users that require assistance with their day-to-day computer usage, including full support for networking PC's, virus & malware removal, system upgrades and general support questions.


Discussion Forums
Operating Systems
Windows 7 Windows 7
Windows Vista Windows Vista
Windows XP Windows XP
Windows Server System Windows Server System
Windows 2000 Windows 2000
Windows 95/98/Me/NT Windows 95/98/Me/NT
Internet & Networking
Networking
Internet Explorer
Microsoft Mail
Firefox, Thunderbird
      & SeaMonkey

General Internet
Security
General Security
Malware and Virus
     Removal

Other
Other Software
Hardware
Test Posts
Community
Introductions
General Discussions
Comments
      & Suggestions

News @ WindowsBBS

Forum Sponsor
 Image

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old 17th June 2009   #1
Senior Member
 
Profile:
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 208
Computer Experience:
Experienced
IvanH Reputation Level


DVD drive disappeared

After a DVD was put into the DVD drive, it whirled for a while and stopped. Then the DVD drive disappeared (from the Computer). I needed to reboot in order to get it back. Why? And is there any way to get the DVD drive without reboot?
IvanH is offline   Reply With Quote
Didn't find the information you thought to find?
Check out these Similar Threads
Old 17th June 2009   #2
Staff
 
Steve R Jones's Avatar
 
Profile:
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Dallas, TX
Posts: 8,151
Computer Experience:
Experienced
Steve R Jones Reputation LevelSteve R Jones Reputation LevelSteve R Jones Reputation LevelSteve R Jones Reputation LevelSteve R Jones Reputation LevelSteve R Jones Reputation LevelSteve R Jones Reputation LevelSteve R Jones Reputation LevelSteve R Jones Reputation LevelSteve R Jones Reputation LevelSteve R Jones Reputation Level


Did you put the DVD in and it worked after the reboot?

If you loose the drive again - you could try going into Device Manager - if it's not there either you could try Action->Scan for Hardware Changes.

But rebooting sure cures alot of issues

Steve R Jones is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 29th June 2009   #3
Senior Member
 
Profile:
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 208
Computer Experience:
Experienced
IvanH Reputation Level


Quote:
Originally Posted by Steve R Jones View Post
Did you put the DVD in and it worked after the reboot?

If you loose the drive again - you could try going into Device Manager - if it's not there either you could try Action->Scan for Hardware Changes.

But rebooting sure cures alot of issues
Scan for Hardware Changes does not work. The DVD RW Drive does not come back into vision. I guess it is because of the DVD zone mismatch. When a DVD of a different zone is inserted into the DVD RW drive, the Vista OS "punishes" the user by shuting down the DVD RW Drive. Reboot is the only way to get it back, so far.

IvanH is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2nd July 2009   #4
Staff
 
mattman's Avatar
 
Profile:
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Sydney, Aust
Posts: 6,707
Computer Experience:
working backwards
mattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Level


I don't think you will find it is Vista. Zone limits are "built into" the DVD drive.
mattman is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2nd July 2009   #5
Senior Member
 
Profile:
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 208
Computer Experience:
Experienced
IvanH Reputation Level


Yeap. It's as wired as constraining people from reading an e-newspaper just in the suburbs they bought the newspaper. When they brought the newspaper to another suburb, they were not allowed to read the same e-newspaper.

Not sure if any of you notice that: when you do a Google search in one country, the same criteria entered in another country give a different search result, even at the same time. That's location-based. They detect where you are and restrict you what you can see.

IvanH is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 3rd July 2009   #6
Staff
 
mattman's Avatar
 
Profile:
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Sydney, Aust
Posts: 6,707
Computer Experience:
working backwards
mattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Level


Quote:
Originally Posted by IvanH View Post
Not sure if any of you notice that: when you do a Google search in one country, the same criteria entered in another country give a different search result, even at the same time. That's location-based. They detect where you are and restrict you what you can see.
I expect that you have set your Google searches to start at your local area. I set Yahoo searches to start in my area (Australia. maybe broader than a US search). If I change my search to "general" it will come up with non-Australian websites as the first hits. I expect it is how you sort your searches.

Matt
Edit: I have seen that that sites or searches are being censored. If you live in the US, references to the current political situation may be, errrm, censored.

mattman is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 3rd July 2009   #7
Senior Member
 
Profile:
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 208
Computer Experience:
Experienced
IvanH Reputation Level


That's what I did last year. I was planning holiday over the phone with somebody at the other side of the world. We both set search to general on our browser but saw different things! Not just google, but some news websites as well. Local people see differently from those readers from overseas. Try those Aussie news like smh.com.au with a friend in Australia. Other websites like asus, apple, ibm etc, they just move you to your local country's website without hiding the http link. Local-based internet has been a tool to filter what you can see. What's the difference between capitalism and communism?
IvanH is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 3rd July 2009   #8
Staff
 
mattman's Avatar
 
Profile:
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Sydney, Aust
Posts: 6,707
Computer Experience:
working backwards
mattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Level


I think you can see that it is not Vista. When connected to the internet, my location is broadcast (Sydney Australia) so advertisements on various websites will come up aimed at Australia and possibly Sydney.

If you go to www.grc.com and do port scanning (ShieldsUP), it will tell you what identification is being broadcast for your connection. Read the section "The text below might uniquely identify you on the Internet".

Matt

mattman is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 4th July 2009   #9
Senior Member
 
Profile:
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 208
Computer Experience:
Experienced
IvanH Reputation Level


Hi Mattman,

Recap a little back... that the DVD drive disappeared from the Computer after a different zone DVD was inserted into the drive, this behaviour happened and in coincidence the computer was running on Windows Vista. What you said to my understanding was that the DVD drive shut down itself and hid behind Windows Vista. Is it what you meant?

If it is truly the case, then Windows XP should encounter the same result, provided the DVD drive zoning is different from the DVD zone. I don't have the environment to test it. Having said that, when I insert a different zone DVD into the DVD drive of a desktop PC, an error message will tell me the DVD is not readable, but the DVD drive is still there. Perhaps different DVD drive brands respond differently when a different zoned DVD is inserted. But to me, this is a guess, and not a conclusive answer.

Anyway, your suggested grc.com is a convenient place to check basic Internet security. Thanks for that. It reveals another isse: it should be the ISP to provide proxy services in order to provide their customers with static IP addresses. If it happens, the customers will be at least shielded off their node address.

IvanH is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 4th July 2009   #10
Staff
 
mattman's Avatar
 
Profile:
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Sydney, Aust
Posts: 6,707
Computer Experience:
working backwards
mattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Levelmattman Reputation Level


I can see what you mean. Maybe you are supposed to get a warning that the number of zones have been exceeded, but something goes wrong (drivers?) and the drive "disappears". It might be set to run the warning in Windows XP or hangs on User Account Control (or needs UAC if you have turned it off).
mattman is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 6th July 2009   #11
Senior Member
 
Profile:
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 208
Computer Experience:
Experienced
IvanH Reputation Level


Hi Mattman,

Partially correct. Yes, I believe a warning message about putting in a DVD of wrong zone is more acceptable. But it's not about "exceeding" the number of changes in zones. I experienced in some notebooks that the DVD zone will change from "no zone" t the zone of the first DVD inserted (except an all zone DVD). It's very rude just to shut down the DVD drive, not even telling the OS.

Anyway, I am unsubscribing this thread. Cheers.

IvanH is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 27th September 2009   #12
Senior Member
 
Profile:
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 208
Computer Experience:
Experienced
IvanH Reputation Level


After 2 months, I thought I might have found the cuase that made the DVD drive disappeared. It could be the iTunes alone (because since updated to iTunes 9.0.1, the problem has disappeared), or in a combination of the HP Photosmart C5200 Series Ssolution Center 10.0.0, that many other people have a similar complaints as well.

See also http://blogs.zdnet.com/hardware/?p=2600 for more information.

IvanH is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
DVD Drive problem.[Cannot open DVD movie burnt on computer] jerry zarb Windows XP 6 18th May 2009 06:42
DVD drive not working jen626 Hardware 2 25th October 2004 10:21
Drive imaged new harddrive problems morg Hardware 7 20th October 2004 01:46
Will not find CD-RW or DVD Drive Shortcut johnberb Hardware 0 1st October 2003 07:46
Drive not keeping format information -- WinME LewDog Hardware 2 10th December 2002 19:55


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:06.






Advertisements do not imply our endorsement of the product or service advertised.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.3.2
Copyright © 2002 - 2009 WindowsBBS.com. All rights reserved.
Terms of Use, Legal Information & Privacy Policy
[]