You don't mention either the PC or the mainboard manufacturer, or
whether there may have been a wholesale migration of software apps to
this machine from a laptop.
- There are laptop utilities/services that will run on a desktop and of
course cause your problem. Also, the battery sensing may be a component
in some app you've found otherwise useful.
- You might check BIOS settings very carefully, altho it would be very
unusual for a desktop mainboard BIOS to be looking at battery power.
- Could this be UPS (battery backup) related)?
- Some mainboard utility packages (on CD's that come with drivers etc)
might be targeted at both desktops and laptops...and might have
installed a battery sensor.
These are SWAGs...the thread seems kind of dry.
Rich Pasco wrote:
> I have a desktop computer (plugged into AC mains) running Windows 2000
> which displays in its system tray a tiny icon looking like a battery
> with a red "X" through it.
>
> If I click on that icon a window opens up which says:
>
> Current power source: Batteries
> Battery power remaining: 0%
>
> A well-meaning helper said this meant that the CMOS BIOS backup battery
> was dead, but I'm not so sure. It's the same icon that a laptop shows
> when it's running on battery power and the battery is nearly dead.
> But this is a desktop machine. In this case what does this indicator
> mean? I suppose it has ACPI and is confused about its power source.
> How can I set it straight?
>
> - Rich
>
>
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