Vista may be pulling the name of the device and filling in the blank when
reporting it, as opposed to actually understanding what the device is. I
passed Biology this way; memorized everything, filled in all the blanks,
understood very little of what I was reading or writing. I'll reiterate
that MSFT gets the device drivers for hardware from the manufacturers of the
hardware and there is no such thing as "native" support for a hardware
device in Windows. There are some pieces parts that are ubiquitous and it
"seems" as though the driver is an integral part of the code, but that is
the case of the manufacturer being on the ball and is usually a video card
or a motherboard, where there are very few manufactures and not a wide range
of products.
I have exactly the opposite issue as you: I received the notification one
day that "Unknown device has been installed successfully." Now, there is no
change to the functionality of my system, I still have no sound and no modem
and Device Manager still shows the yellow "bangs" next to those two items.
I have no idea what Vista thinks it installed, no idea how to find out and
really, with RC1 right around the corner, no real desire to track it down.
Borrow a friend's firewire device, plug it in and see if it works. Try your
modem and see if it works. Check with the motherboard manufacturer for a
"Vista" update. File a bug report with Microsoft.
"Barefoot1976" <> wrote in message
news:C0965FAE-4465-42EA-9128-...
> Well for one "I" am the computer maker-so that lets me out
No
> seriously
> what I am trying to do is to understand the yellow? in the device mgr. It
> shows a PCI device as not having a driver. By noting the TI 1394
> recognition,
> I am/was assuming that the card is being recognized by the system properly
> as
> there never was a disk with the card. Windows was always supposed to load
> it.
> Therefore I was trying to run down the PCI card causing the driver
> problem.
> The only PCI cards I have in the unit is a 56k Modem, firewire card, and a
> Creative sound card. The Creative sound card was one of the original
> problems, however I loaded the drivers for it and it went away. The modem
> shows up as ok in device mgr.
> Something you said, however triggered a thought. How does a device that
> connects by USB show up? For instance, I have a HP laserjet 3015 hooked
> up
> with USB2. The unit is an AIW for fax, copy, scan and print. Vista loads
> the
> 3015 for a PCL printer, BUT the scan and Fax software is rejected by
> Vista.
> Would the Modem in the unit be showing up as PCI?
>
> "Mark D. VandenBeg" wrote:
>
>> This is commonly known as a "Firewire" port.
>>
>> When I first plugged my HP printer into an XP box, XP recognized it by
>> model
>> number and installed it correctly, without me having to insert the
>> included
>> CD-ROM. This is not native support, merely a demonstration of HP having
>> provided Microsoft with the drivers for this particular printer and
>> Microsoft including these drivers in either the initial offering of XP or
>> in
>> one of the service packs or updates.
>>
>> All hardware drivers are produced by the manufacturer of the hardware.
>> Certainly, over time, Windows XP has become very inclusive of many common
>> hardware device drivers. Since the requirements for Vista, and
>> especially
>> for Vista x64 (all drivers must be digitally signed) have changed
>> significantly, it may well be that many hardware vendors have yet to
>> provide
>> Microsoft with appropriate drivers for all of their hardware. As you can
>> imagine, this is a daunting task, as the number of different pieces of
>> hardware can be numbered in the hundreds of thousands.
>>
>> In your particular situation I would contact the maker of the computer,
>> the
>> maker of the motherboard and the maker of the port, in that order. I
>> also
>> would file a bug report with Microsoft regarding this issue so that they
>> may
>> contact the hardware manufacturer for an appropriate driver, if they so
>> choose.
>>
>> "Barefoot1976" <> wrote in message
>> news:57B4E93E-C0E7-46EA-9FDF-...
>> > To wit: In the Device Mgr. There is a yellow ? over a PCI i/o
>> > hardware
>> > device. Tracing it down, I have a PCI card for IEEE1394 installed in
>> > the
>> > machine. Window XP shows the card operating w/o any need of external
>> > drivers
>> > (I believe we call this native drivers?) However in Vista beta2, I get
>> > the
>> > Yellow ? with a PCI i/o device and Vista wants drivers. Device Mgr
>> > shows
>> > the
>> > TI 1394 Controller that is ON the card installed, so why is it wanting
>> > a
>> > PCI
>> > driver? I don't have any firewire devices to test the card with, as I
>> > installed the card in the machine when I built it, expecting to get a
>> > DV
>> > camera later on, and I was made to understand that the best transfer
>> > from
>> > a
>> > DV is with firewire. Any thoughts?
>>
>>
>>