Posted by Joe Colagreco

 

 

Stop Windows from Randomly Searching the Floppy Drive

 

Intended For
Windows Me
Windows 98
Windows 95

A strange bug that popped up in Windows 95 occasionally shows itself in later versions, where the floppy drive (or drives) is searched every time an application is launched. This problem is not confined to the use of Explorer, or necessarily on systems with Norton Navigator installed. This problem is not caused by an intial access to the floppy, as rebooting does not solve the problem.

The following are possible solutions to this problem:

Clear the documents menu.
Clear Unwanted Entries from the Start Menu's Run Command.
Check for any viruses on your system (some users have reported the NEUVILLE virus)
Search your hard disk for all .PIF that point to programs on a floppy drive
Take out LocalLoadHigh=1 from your MSDOS.SYS file.
Check HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT/CLSID in the Registry for any references to OCX's or DLL's referenced on the floppy.
Double-click on the System icon in Control panel, choose the Device Manager tab, and delete the GENERIC FLOPPY DISK entry (found under Disk drives). When Windows restarts, it'll re-detect the drive and the problem should go away.

Other programs known to cause this problem:

Norton Navigator - Clear Norton Navigator's Run history (or disable the Run history all together), and download the bug fix from Symantec.
McAfee Antivirus '95 - try removing this program entirely, or just disabling the Access & Shutdown options in the Scan Disks On area in the Detection tab of the VShield Configuration Manager.
FirstAid '95 - try removing this program or disabling certain features.
Long Filenames for Windows 98 - View Software has a patch that supposedly fixes this problem.
HiJack for Windows 98 - turning off "Enable HiJaak shell extensions" in the HiJack Control Panel.
Konica Picture Show - try removing this program entirely.
Norton Antivirus 2000 - turn off the options that scan the floppy drive during startup and shutdown

 

 

Send mail to [email protected] with questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 2002 JPAC Networks
Last modified: March 28, 2002
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1