EdwardMartinIII
Technical User
A few weeks back, I could play music CDs by popping the CD in the drive and closing it. Eventually, my lovely computer would figure out it had a music CD, open up WIndows Media Player, and play it.
What was so hard about that?
Last week, I pop it in and am told
Hey, digital mode seems like a reasonable thing for a CD, so I click "Cancel". The error window goes away and Windows Media Player sits there, daring me to click the PLAY button. I do. Same error message.
Okay, evidently digital mode is bad, m'kay. So I click "OK".
Quietly, my speakers mock me.
Ah, but here's ANOTHER error message:
Clearly, digital mode is not the way to go. Because I'm naive, I click "More information" and a helpful Helpie window thingy tells me
Easy so far, there's a few devices there. Now it tells me
Does it say "If nothing happens when you double-click the CD-ROM drive, then click here. No. Why? Because I would click there and that would be too easy.
So, nothing happens when I double-click the drive. Well, nothing for longer than a fraction of a second. A window looks like it tried popping up, but it is almost immediately vanishified. I don't get a chance to read it or anything. It's just gone. I double-click the other things and I get properties, but not this. I double-click the DVD-RAM drive and nothing pops up, either.
According to this:
it might be a hardware issue of some sort. Except I didn't have this hardware issue until a few weeks ago (I think). Plus, the article seems to suggest that this only applies to Media Player 7.
According to this:
The hardware's stayed the same, and I don't even know what DVD Region Killer is much less installed it. I suppose I could try System Restore, but after I post this note.
This machine is a Compaq Presario 7994. I am using Windows Media Player 9, which, according to Windows Media Player, is the latest version.
Any advice?
Thanks!
Edward ![[monkey] [monkey] [monkey]](/data/assets/smilies/monkey.gif)
"Cut a hole in the door. Hang a flap. Criminy, why didn't I think of this earlier?!" -- inventor of the cat door
What was so hard about that?
Last week, I pop it in and am told
Windows Media Player encountered an error when reading the CD-ROM drive in digital mode. Click OK to switch to analog mode. Click Cancel to retry playing in digital mode.
Hey, digital mode seems like a reasonable thing for a CD, so I click "Cancel". The error window goes away and Windows Media Player sits there, daring me to click the PLAY button. I do. Same error message.
Okay, evidently digital mode is bad, m'kay. So I click "OK".
Quietly, my speakers mock me.
Ah, but here's ANOTHER error message:
WIndows Media Player encountered an error when reading the CD-ROM drive in digital mode. You can try to use digital mode again, or you can switch the Player to analog mode.
Clearly, digital mode is not the way to go. Because I'm naive, I click "More information" and a helpful Helpie window thingy tells me
1. On the Tools menu, click Options, and then click the Devices tab
Easy so far, there's a few devices there. Now it tells me
Double-click the CD-ROM drive, and then in the Playback area, click Digital.
Does it say "If nothing happens when you double-click the CD-ROM drive, then click here. No. Why? Because I would click there and that would be too easy.
So, nothing happens when I double-click the drive. Well, nothing for longer than a fraction of a second. A window looks like it tried popping up, but it is almost immediately vanishified. I don't get a chance to read it or anything. It's just gone. I double-click the other things and I get properties, but not this. I double-click the DVD-RAM drive and nothing pops up, either.
According to this:
it might be a hardware issue of some sort. Except I didn't have this hardware issue until a few weeks ago (I think). Plus, the article seems to suggest that this only applies to Media Player 7.
According to this:
Q: Why am I getting error 0xc00d11f8 - "Windows Media Player encountered an error when reading the CD-ROM drive in digital mode. You can try to use digital mode again, or you can switch the Player to analog mode."?
You need to go to the player's Tools:Optionsevices menu option, select the Properties for that drive and change to use Analog mode. If that doesn't work, read on...
I've heard that "DVD Region Killer" caused this problem for one person. They ran System Restore to get help get rid of it, and then things worked fine again.
The hardware's stayed the same, and I don't even know what DVD Region Killer is much less installed it. I suppose I could try System Restore, but after I post this note.
This machine is a Compaq Presario 7994. I am using Windows Media Player 9, which, according to Windows Media Player, is the latest version.
Any advice?
Thanks!
![[monkey] [monkey] [monkey]](/data/assets/smilies/monkey.gif)
![[monkey] [monkey] [monkey]](/data/assets/smilies/monkey.gif)
"Cut a hole in the door. Hang a flap. Criminy, why didn't I think of this earlier?!" -- inventor of the cat door