Drivers and the Like...

by Aison

Back to The Real World.

Aison2007-02-08 01:52:32
scream.gif

My friend was looking through my iTunes and picked out some stuff she wanted me to burn her (completely legal to do so!). So I got my stack of old and dusty blank CDs and put one in the drive. The disc spun, was read, I could see it in "My Computer" but when I went to file > Burn playlist to disc in iTunes, the option wasn't available.

I tried another disc. Anger rising, I tried another. I tried ten more.

Then I clicked the disc from "My Computer" and it asked me to format it. Not very computer-technical myself unless it comes to anti-virus and getting rid of spam, I do so. Nothing different happens. I right click to make it compatible, waste 2 minutes of my life doing so, and still no difference. I run my anti-virus. Clean there. Run Ad-Aware. Clean there. Run Spybot. Nothing of notice there.

One disc out of the 30something I tried worked. I gave up after a while and went to the store and bought a brand of Philips CD-R blank audio discs. I was using imation and figured that perhaps changing the brand would work.

I was wrong. Same deal.

So now I have to sit here and wait in a chat to speak to someone who is probably from Arabia and won't fix my problem. I keep my computer updated and clean and I am the only person who uses it so I see no reason why my laptop would suddenly stop deciding to burn CDs for me. I looked at Dell's FAQ and downloads and I see nothing in relation to my problem. It rips CDs just fine but it won't burn them. I thought that maybe it was an iTunes thing, so I checked it in Windows Media -- well, same thing. Nothing different at all. iTunes and Windows Media Player don't even recognize that there's a disc in the drive.

I'm running on a Dell Inspiron 1300 with a Pentium M. It's not the newest of laptops but I don't need anything brand-new. I've had it since June (it was a birthday gift).

Does anyone know what's going on? Because to top off my anger, some idiot in MSN keeps talking to me and saying, "Oh, I wish I could help." Like that does anything. I don't need sympathy and idiocy. I need answers and logic, dang it! mad.gif

I'm going to feel really stupid when the answer is simple, though.
Neerth2007-02-08 08:43:37
Usually the problem in these situations is one of the following:

(1) You accidentally put your blank CDs in your toaster, rather than the CD drive of your computer.
(2) You accidentally used Eggo-brand frozen waffles instead of blank CDs.

Ironically, making both mistakes (1) and (2) simultaneously will result in a happy though unexpected outcome.

(don't kill meee....)

I feel your pain - computers evoke the very definition of love-hate relationships, don't they.
Unknown2007-02-08 22:29:49
It's possible your CD drive has conked out. I don't know much more than that, but I know that they can do it.

EDIT: When you say "dusty" blank CDs, are you being serious? If so, look for instructions on cleaning the lens.
Aison2007-02-11 05:24:42
QUOTE(Neerth @ Feb 8 2007, 12:43 AM) 381555
Usually the problem in these situations is one of the following:

(1) You accidentally put your blank CDs in your toaster, rather than the CD drive of your computer.
(2) You accidentally used Eggo-brand frozen waffles instead of blank CDs.

Ironically, making both mistakes (1) and (2) simultaneously will result in a happy though unexpected outcome.

(don't kill meee....)

I feel your pain - computers evoke the very definition of love-hate relationships, don't they.



laugh.gif

Laptop CD-ROM drivers just suck in general. I decided not to talk to the guy from Arabia and am just going to send it in to get a new CD-ROM drive with my warranty that cost me an arm and a leg. I've toted this thing from Massachusetts to Washington and back three dozen times. Of course the first thing to go would be the thing I need. sad.gif

Regarding dusty CDs, they were dusty, but I cleaned them before I used them. And brand new dust-free ones didn't work either.
Unknown2007-02-11 08:40:28
QUOTE(Aison @ Feb 11 2007, 05:24 AM) 382221
laugh.gif

Laptop CD-ROM drivers just suck in general. I decided not to talk to the guy from Arabia and am just going to send it in to get a new CD-ROM drive with my warranty that cost me an arm and a leg. I've toted this thing from Massachusetts to Washington and back three dozen times. Of course the first thing to go would be the thing I need. sad.gif

Regarding dusty CDs, they were dusty, but I cleaned them before I used them. And brand new dust-free ones didn't work either.


You'd have to clean them very thoroughly if they were to work if they were as dusty as you said they were. Also, I mentioned lens-cleaning for a reason. The brand new ones might not work because the lens has a speck of dust on it. Just one getting caught can potentially spoil it until you remove it.
Amaterasu2007-02-14 22:31:03
Ok, before you go packing your lappy all up and sending it back for a new CD drive, have you tried writing CD's with windows? I dont mean music CD's, just your run-of-the-mill file storage CD's. Do everything you can to make sure its not the drive and not a software problem before you send it back.

There is nothing computer companies like more then arguing about who's problem something really is... >_<