14.4 When Plug and Play Doesn't WorkIf, when you connect a new component, Windows XP doesn't display a message like the one at top in Figure 14-2, it probably can't "see" your new device.If you've installed an internal card, make sure that it's seated in the slot firmly (after shutting down your computer, of course).If you attached something external, make sure that it has power and is correctly connected to the PC. Figure 14-2. Top: You're halfway home. Windows XP has at least acknowledged that you've plugged something in. Click the balloon to proceed with the software installation (if you didn't install the software first, as you should have). Bottom: The Found New Hardware Wizard. You'll rarely use the bottom option, "Don't search. I will choose the driver to install." It's primarily used to override Windows XP's own, preinstalled driver in favor of another onefor example, one that came from the original manufacturer that you've been told offers more features than the official Microsoft driver. In either case, before panicking, try restarting the PC. If you still have no luck, try the Add New Hardware Wizard described in the next section. (And if even that doesn't work, call the manufacturer.)If your new gadget didn't come with a disk (or maybe just a disk with drivers, but no installer), then hooking it up may produce the "Found New Hardware" balloon shown at top in Figure 14-2. Click the balloon to make the New Hardware Wizard appear (Figure 14-2, bottom). In that case, proceed like this:If you have the drivers on a disk from the manufacturer. Select the first option, "Install the software automatically," insert the driver disk if it's not already in the machine, and then click Next. Windows either finds the compatible driver and installs it automatically, or offers you a choice of several.
14.4.1 Using the Add Hardware WizardThe Add Hardware Wizard fulfills some of the functions of the Found New Hardware Wizard, but comes in handy in different circumstances. You can use it whenever Windows fails to notice that you've blessed it with new components, for example, or to update the original driver when a better one becomes available.Begin by connecting the new gear (turning off the computer first, if necessary). Turn the machine on again and then open the Add Hardware Wizard program in the Control Panel (Chapter 9). Click Next to move past the Welcome screen. 14.4.1.1 The search for Plug and PlayThe first thing the wizard wants to do is search for a Plug and Play device. You already know that it won't find oneafter all, if the hardware you're trying to install were Plug and Playcompatible, Windows XP would have found it already.Unfortunately, you can't stop the Hardware Wizard juggernaut. You have no choice but to click Next and proceed as outlined in the next section. 14.4.1.2 Add Hardware Wizard searches for nonPlug and Play devicesIf the search for Plug and Play hardware fails, a new wizard window opens and asks you if the new equipment is already connected to the PC. If you answer no, the wizard closesits subtle way of telling you that you were supposed to have connected the gadget before even opening the wizard.
Now the wizard asks you to make yet another decision:Search for and install the hardware automatically. If you choose this option and click Next, Windows makes yet another attempt to detect the new equipment and install its driver. If a happy little "Found New Hardware" balloon appears in your notification area, all is well; the wizard's work is done.If the search succeeds, you've saved a couple of keystrokes; if it fails, you move on to the second option anyway.Install the hardware that I manually select from a list. If you choose this option and click Next (or if the previous option fails), the wizard displays a list of device types (top left in Figure 14-4). From that list, find and select the type of hardware you want to install"Imaging devices" for a digital camera or a scanner, for example, "PCMCIA adapters" for a PC card, and so on. (Click Show All Devices if you can't figure out which category to choose.)Figure 14-4. Top left: Specify which kind of component you're adding. Bottom: Scroll down the left pane to find the name of your hardware manufacturer (in this case, a PC card is the hardware). The right pane of the window changes to display all the models the manufacturer offers, or at least the models that Windows XP knows about. If you can't find your model number, check the hardware's documentation to see if selecting one of the listed models would work just as well.Then click Next. Now Windows XP opens a two-paned window like the one shown at bottom in Figure 14-4.To complete the installation, click Next to forge on through the wizard pages. You may be asked to select a port or configure other settings. When you click the Finish button on the last screen, Windows transfers the drivers to your hard drive. (Along the way, you may be instructed to insert the Windows XP Professional installation CD.) As a final step, you may be asked to restart the PC. |