Too late now. What you should have done, rather than use live update, was download the entire SP2, which you could have then saved on your hard...
You have lots of NICs in the registry, but they're not showing up in device manager, so of course you can't uninstall them. To get them to show...
The different disk GUID and the changed drive letter would keep the SCSI copy from starting w2k. Those issues can be overcome by following the...
I had problems with drivers for several brands of analog USB modems. Try removing and see if that stops it.
I'd see which service is hogging the cpu, determine what it is, and if it's not an essential service try to remove it. It likely is a progrram...
That folder holds ActiveX controls that, depending on your asigned permissions, have been downloaded by your browser. You can remove whatever...
Don't know, but I'd be looking at w2k hardware compatibility. Also, depending on how you connect to the internet, could be a NIC or modem w2k...
You might try removing both the printer and :PT1 port in device manager, rebooting, letting LPT1 get detected and reinstalled. Reboot again, and...
MS KB describes possible causes as: Hardware failure (memory, processor, or motherboard). Anti-virus software that is running on your computer....
Do they show up in Disk Management?
Maybe low RAM memory, or too many background programs hogging the memory and cpu cycles.
Likely a driver issue. Modem troubleshooting site at http://808hi.com/56k/ might help you pinpoint the problem.
You can change the computer type in device manager without reinstalling. Only if you change the ACPI setting do you have to reinstall.
There's a checkbox that puts volume control on the taskbar. In playback properties, make sure that devices you want sound from are not muted and...
Sent you an email.
You're not being asked for a floppy disk that you've made, but for the location of the device driver you're wanting to install. Driver files...
Things to try, in order that they are listed: 1. Don't enter a password, use blank. If that doesn't get you into BIOS then try 2. Get rid of...
The /system32 folder has a subfolder called ..\system32\dllcache - it contains backups of many system files, and you'll find it in there.
I'd search mfg's web sites for updated w2k drivers for the hardware that causes problems - and also try updated VIA drivers.
The backup program is %SystemRoot%\system32\ntbackup.exe - perhaps the file became corrupted and needs to be replaced.
Separate names with a comma.