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System tray notification
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Windows XP
Windows XP Configuration
System tray notification
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System tray notification |
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#1 |
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Guest
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I have set the icon "Local area Connection"-a network cable is unplugged to
"always hide"- I do not have a local network set up. The icon keeps appearing on startup. Why is this and can I prevent it from happening? Thanks |
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#2 |
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Go into Device manager and disable your network card (NIC). Right click My
My Network Places. Left Click properties. Right click the Local Area Connection for your network card (under Device Name) and then left click on disable. Answer any questions about removing from bridge, etc. and you should not have the notification anymore. "JA D" <pejd@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:OlxYyZwhEHA.1764@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl... > I have set the icon "Local area Connection"-a network cable is unplugged to > "always hide"- > I do not have a local network set up. > The icon keeps appearing on startup. > Why is this and can I prevent it from happening? > Thanks > > |
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#3 |
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As for WHY does it happen; it's due to the way that the notification
system works. When an item is put into the tray, Windows logs it by looking at the process that put it there (the EXE file) and the title (the infotip that you get when you hover the mouse over the icon). Windows also keeps a copy of the icon. In this way Windows can keep track of any and ALL items that have been in the tray and allows you to set them manually. Whenever an item is put into the tray, Windows compares the process and the title to see if there is a match in it's notification database. If there is, then it uses the settings for that item, if there is not, then it logs the new item and defaults it to "Hide when inactive". The problem arises when the title changes. You'll see that some items like the Task Manager often change their title, in TM's case, it shows the CPU load "CPU Usage: 100%", "CPU Usage: 5%", "CPU Usage: 43%", etc. This causes a little confusion with the item lookup and as a result if you manually set it, close the item, then run it again and go back to the Customize dialog, you'll see it's set to "Hide when inactive" again. This is because when you started it again, Windows looked it up but was not certain that the item in the tray was in fact the same as the one you configured, so to be safe, it picks the one it THINKS is right, and changes it to HWI. How does this affect you? Well it's because this behavior happens to any item that changes it's title at all. In your case the item starts out with one title, then when Windows detects that the network cable is not connected, it changes the title to reflect that and as a result, the tray lookup craps out. This is quite annoying since the whole purpose to the notification area is to store items that NOTIFY you of stuff which means they HAVE to change otherwise they're just notifying you that nothing has changed and that's kind of like Homer Simpson's "Everything's Okay Alarm". Unfortunately when it comes to items that change their titles AT ALL, there is nothing that can be done to force it to stay; we'll just have to wait for Microsoft to come up with a better way of handling it. HTH -- Alec S. alec <@> synetech <.> cjb <.> net "JA D" <pejd@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:OlxYyZwhEHA.1764@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl... > I have set the icon "Local area Connection"-a network cable is unplugged to > "always hide"- > I do not have a local network set up. > The icon keeps appearing on startup. > Why is this and can I prevent it from happening? > Thanks > |
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#4 |
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On Fri, 20 Aug 2004 19:36:10 -0400, "LVTravel" <none@nothere.com>
wrote: >Go into Device manager and disable your network card (NIC). Right click My >My Network Places. Left Click properties. Right click the Local Area >Connection for your network card (under Device Name) and then left click on >disable. Answer any questions about removing from bridge, etc. and you >should not have the notification anymore. > >"JA D" <pejd@yahoo.com> wrote in message >news:OlxYyZwhEHA.1764@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl... >> I have set the icon "Local area Connection"-a network cable is unplugged >to >> "always hide"- >> I do not have a local network set up. >> The icon keeps appearing on startup. >> Why is this and can I prevent it from happening? >> Thanks >> >> > Enter your BIOS (setup) on boot , go to your "Peripherals" screen and disable your onboard LAN. Will solve everything. Depending on motherboard, disabling a LAN IN windows does not *always* keep the LAN from showing in the system tray. Disable it in BIOS, and windows doesn't even know it's there. §kullywag©- |
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