Nate Nagel <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
news:(E-Mail Removed):
<SNIP>
You should have the manuf. disc but I don't know when you bought
the mouse, how old the driver is, etc. **** happens. I will
assume you have tried MANUALLY (see below) installing from the
disc that came with the mouse and it has NOT worked.
Go to
www.driverguide.com - free registration required - I have
been registered for years and no spam, no nothing, so don't
worry and just do it. After getting your password in the mail
and signing in, you will get a "buy this" screen with a tiny "no
thank you" link on bottom right, click on that and you're good
to go.
Enter the manufacturer and EXACT model of the mouse. You may
have to try several times. Search engines can't think so an
extra space or dash may **** this up.
One or 20 (or 2,000) drivers will turn up. (Or none, in which
case enter the exact manuf/model number followed by the word
"driver" in Google and see what you can find.)
Download ALL the drivers which correspond to your mouse AND your
OS into some directory like c:\temp or c:\windows\temp. Unzip
(NOT execute, not install, UNZIP if they are ZIP files, leave
alone if .msi or .exe) all the drivers into their /separate/
subdirectories.
Disconnect from the net after you've DL'd the drivers. Scan this
ENTIRE directory of drivers for viruses/malware. Turn off your
AV program(s) and KEEP IT/them OFF until your mouse works.
Delete/remove/nuke ALL references to mouse drivers you can find
on your computer. This includes messing with the registry - look
for Logitech, wireless (not at once, two searches) and remove
the keys (unless they're for /another/ wireless device you have,
which works, and which you need).
Don't worry about backing up, nothing bad will happen. All
you're doing is removing references to something that is NOT
working already. (But if you're paranoid, you can back up the
registry, it's /your/ computer.)
Also go to add/remove programs and remove anything which looks
like it may be a Logitech mouse driver of ANY kind. The ONLY
mouse driver which should stay on your system is the one that XP
comes with and which does NOT show up in add/remove software or
hardware.
Turn off the machine and unplug the mouse. (Yes, even though
it's USB.) Leave the mouse unplugged. I will ASSUME you can use
the keyboard well enough to do what follows without a mouse
(Google for and download "Windows Keyboard Shortcuts" from
somewhere if necessary).
Reboot and see if anything shows up in Control Panel - System
Devices. There should be NOTHING. If there is, get rid of it.
Repeat this step /as many times as necessary/.
If at any point it says "new hardware found, do you want Windows
to install (etc)" say *NO*. (This applies to ALL similar
situations, BTW. Never let stupid Windows do anything you can do
manually the RIGHT way.)
Open the registry again and do the searches again to make sure
it is *all gone*.
Turn off machine, plug in mouse, boot. Again, if it says "new
hardware found, do you want Windows to install (etc)" say *NO*.
One by one, MANUALLY install the drivers you DL'd until you get
to the one that works. You WILL have to do the UNINSTALL in
add/remove AND the FULL "getting rid of left-over crap after
supposedly uninstalling" for each driver which does not work.
(Sorry - complain to MS.)
If nothing works, post again.
Are you SURE that your USB drivers are working properly?
(They're at the bottom under system.) Do you have another USB
device that /is/ working (keyboard, camera, whatever)?
It is also possible that you are missing a port - I don't know
exactly how USB works, you shouldn't /need/ a port but the
Logitech software may be "peculiar". In which case go to "add
new hardware" and add a new USB or mouse port or whatever is
offered. The drivers for that are probably on your machine
already, in the worst case you will need to put in the XP disc.
--
The arrows are faster than rodents!
- t.