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#11
Teamviewer was just a thought that I had in passing, but quickly realized that it would not work
Teamviewer was just a thought that I had in passing, but quickly realized that it would not work
What happens if you unplug and then replug the mouse while Windows is running ?
What happens if boot Windows with the mouse unplugged, then plug it in after Windows starts ?
Do either of these force Windows to find a new device and install it ?
I was able to get the repair disc to boot, but now it's asking me to choose an OS before getting to a restore point. Good thing is that mouse and keyboard will work in this mode.
Plugging and unplugging didn't trigger Windows to install a new device.
Took a few restarts, but list finally loaded. I went back to yesterday and it said that the restore failed. Rebooted just to make sure and got window "System Restore did not complete successfully." I'll try another date. Mouse still doesn't work.
Last edited by RicF964; 04 Mar 2015 at 14:08.
I've tried 3 different system restores going back to late February and none will complete successfully. Any ideas how to resolve this? It was supposed to be the answer to my problem.
I have seen that the anti-virus can block system restore, but I can't turn it off without a mouse. <sigh>
Last edited by RicF964; 04 Mar 2015 at 16:27.
Can you get non-usb mouse and keyboard and plug them in?Only way I could fix a similar problem
I'm actually looking at buying an old school PS/2 mouse. I think it's the only way to resolve this. BTW, it was DriverMax that recommended the driver update.
i would never use a third party driver finder updater program alway get the updated driver from the manufature of the device. i guess you learned the hard way. another thought would be to try a cmos reset.
Doesn't matter what's been change just power off computer unplug from wall hold down power button for a few seconds then remove coin size battery on motherboard for a few minutes then put back it and reset bios to default settings