Ok, so I got my new computer in the mail today. Yay!
Everything is hooked up, computer boots fine, and I have three USB laser mice, and none of them work. All work on my other computer, and all the USB ports seem to work (plugging in a external hard drive powers it up), but when I plug in the mice (one at a time, of course) the laser remains dark. No go.
I’m thinking this is something obvious, but I can’t figure out what. Help?
Did the mice come with driver install CD’s? They usually don’t, but I thought it would be worth asking.
Failing that, google the make/model for drivers to download. Sounds like it’s having trouble installing the drivers manually. The only hardware I’ve had this problem with though is old webcams. Mice are usually plug in - ready to go.
Also try going into control panel>system>hardware>device manager. Right click on human interface devices and click scan. You never know, you might get lucky.
But I can’t go to anything…I can’t get past the welcome screen–no mouse, remember? It’s three different basic mice…there really shouldn’t be any drivers. They all work on this laptop with no instalation.
I’ve had one plugged in for an hour or so, no detection.
You don’t need a mouse to navigate around your PC. You can use the tab button to cycle through your desktop, and the start bar (or ctrl esc), which you can use to go to device manager. Use the arrow keys and enter key to access things.
Oh, but right clicking. Yes. I am an idiot. When in device manager, press tab, go to action then scan for hardware changes.
Well, finding drivers to install should still be possible. Download them on whatever computer you’re using now and transfer them using a USB memory stick and access them using your keyboard (tab to start, my computer and use the keyboard to go to the device - you said it was only USB mice that weren’t working. If that’s the problem of course, it’s highly unusual for mice not to simply work as soon as you plug them in.
Alternatively, you can access your web explorer using the keyboard, tab your way through the files and google for what you need. It’s very cumbersome, but it works!
Oh, also try plugging in BEFORE you turn on your computer, if you haven’t already. Windows does checks on the startup and it might find them better then.
If in Device Manager you see nothing about human interface devices, then I’d call the computer company. In fact, since it’s brand new and this definitely should not be happening, sounds like a replacement might be better than screwing around and coming across more problems in the future - if it’s like a motherboard issue or something, which it is beginning to sound like.
Hm. That isn’t working for me. The keyboard has lights on it, and appears to be working, but tab does nothing on the welcome screen (and the keyboard doesn’t cancel the screensaver, either).
It’s a XP machine, a friend of mine built it for me. No password box, just a button to click on. I’m in Japan, he’s in Arkansas, and probably won’t be up yet. I’m about to head to bed, so I’ll call him in the morning. I just though this might be something obvious, but perhaps not.
Thanks for the help, everyone. I’ll let you know how it turns out tomorrow.
When the computer boots up, the first screens will usually say something along the lines of “Press F5 or F12 to enter BIOS settings (or sometimes just ‘settings’)”
If no screen like that appears, press tab or esc when it boots up. There should be some information on the screen to tell you which key to press. Just keep tapping it - sometimes pressing it once does not register.
Oh, on the ‘welcome screen’ (I think by that you mean the screen some computers have to allow you to choose a user to log in as) try ctrl alt delete. This should give you a way to enter your username (usually Home if it hasn’t got a specific name set. Just type in whatever you see on the welcome screen - or just try ‘admin’ or ‘administrator’), since you don’t have a password, just leave that field blank.
Once the computer is actually on your desktop, it might actually find the devices, so try that first?
Make sure logmein has a truly secure password on it. Your friend isn’t the only one who could log in with it, if he left it as admin/admin or something.