I Do Not Want Autoplay

B

Bob

I have just installed XP Home SP2. I do not want autoplay. I have checked
every box available to disable autoplay. If I insert a CD, it runs. With
Win 98 SE, There was a single registry entry that could be changed from 0
(?) to 1 or the opposite.

I have searched the various XP websites to no avail. Does anybody know how
to do this?

TIA.
 
R

Richard Urban

You are aware, of course, that you could just hold down the shift key while
you are inserting the CD.

--
Regards,

Richard Urban

Quote from: George Ankner
"If you knew as much as you thought you know,
You would realize that you don't know what you thought you knew!"
 
A

alderessy

Trt this:
right click on My computer,then manage.From the left side choose the
subkey "services" under the key "services and applications".Then on the
right go to "Shell Hardware Detection" right click on it and choose
properties.The properties box has in the middle "start up type" of
"general".Here u can choose disable or manual and restart ur pc.

mohammad
 
L

lomaca

alderessy said:
Trt this:
right click on My computer,then manage.From the left side choose the
subkey "services" under the key "services and applications".Then on the
right go to "Shell Hardware Detection" right click on it and choose
properties.The properties box has in the middle "start up type" of
"general".Here u can choose disable or manual and restart ur pc.

mohammad

Thank you for the enlightenment !
This is of course what most of us would do in the first place!
Trust MS to do it the easy way.
 
L

lomaca

alderessy said:
Trt this:
right click on My computer,then manage.From the left side choose the
subkey "services" under the key "services and applications".Then on the
right go to "Shell Hardware Detection" right click on it and choose
properties.The properties box has in the middle "start up type" of
"general".Here u can choose disable or manual and restart ur pc.

mohammad

Thank you for the enlightenment !
This is of course what most of us would do in the first place!
I think not!
Trust MS to do it the easy way.
 
C

CGB

Good to know, I've had same question. Didn't think the shift key thing
worked on mine. I found out, in case anyone else is curious, that you've
got to hold the Shift key down quite a long time!

Thanks.
Chet
 
A

Andy

http://www.annoyances.org/exec/show/article03-018
Turn Off the CD-ROM Autorun

Intended For
Windows XP
Windows 2000
Windows Me
Windows 98
Windows 95
When an Autorun-enabled CD-ROM is inserted into a CD-ROM drive,
Windows automatically launches the program contained on the disk,
whether you want it to or not. Similarly the audio CD player pops up
whenever you insert an audio CD and starts playing it immediately.
This is cute the first or second time, but soon gets infuriating.
What's worse, is that if you double-click on the your CD icon in My
Computer, the autorun fires up, instead of a folder window as you'd
expect. This is especially irritating on slower computers, where you
have to wait for what seems like an eternity for it to load some
ridiculous welcome screen. Here's how to do it:

Any OS

* If you hold down the Shift key when inserting the CD, the
autorun is bypassed. (although it's not exactly graceful trying to
insert a CD while holding down keys on the keyboard.)

Windows XP - Solution 1

* Right-click on the drive icon for your CD drive, CD recorder, or
DVD drive, and select Properties.
* Choose the AutoPlay tab, and choose the desired action for each
type of CD. For example, choose Music CD, then click Select an action
to perform, then select Take no action.

Windows XP - Solution 2

* Obtain and install TweakUI (part of the PowerToys for Windows XP
package), and then start TweakUI.
* Expand the My Computer branch, then the AutoPlay branch, and
then select Drives.
* Turn off the checkbox next to each drive letter for which you
want AutoPlay disabled.

Windows 2000/XP

* Run the Registry Editor (REGEDIT.EXE).
* Navigate to
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Cdrom.
* Double-click the Autorun value, and type 0 for its value. (If
it's not there, create it by selecting Edit -> New -> DWORD Value, and
typing "Autorun" for its name.)
* You may have to log out and then log back in for this change to
take effect.

* Note: With this solution, Windows will no longer be notified
when you insert a new CD. To make sure the correct icon and title for
the current CD are displayed in My Computer and Explorer, press F5 to
refresh the window.

Windows 95/98/Me - Solution 1

* Right-click on the My Computer icon (or whatever you've renamed
it - hopefully something less cute and more meaningful than "my
computer," such as "Bart"), and select Properties.
* Choose the Device Manager tab.
* Open the CD-ROM branch, and select the entry for your CD-ROM
drive.
* Click Properties, and then choose the Settings tab.
* Turn off the Auto insert notification option.
* Click OK, and then OK again. You'll have to restart Windows for
this change to take effect.

* Note: With this solution, Windows will no longer be notified
when you insert a new CD. To make sure the correct icon and title for
the current CD are displayed in My Computer and Explorer, press F5 to
refresh the window.

Windows 95/98/Me - Solution 2

* Run the Registry Editor (REGEDIT.EXE).
* Open HKEY_CURRENT_USER\ Software\ Microsoft\ Windows\
CurrentVersion\ Policies\ Explorer.
* Change the Value of NoDriveTypeAutoRun from 95 00 00 00 to BD 00
00 00.
* You might have to restart Windows for this change to take
effect.

* Note: With this solution, Windows will no longer be notified
when you insert a new CD. To make sure the correct icon and title for
the current CD are displayed in My Computer and Explorer, press F5 to
refresh the window.

Windows 95/98/Me - Solution 3

* Because of new features in TweakUI, this can now be truly
disabled by turning off the Play audio CDs automatically and Play data
CDs automatically options in the aptly-named Paranoia tab.
* Also, make sure that the AutoInsertNotification option is turned
back on - see Solution #1 above for more information.

* Note: With this solution, Windows will still be notified when
you insert a new CD, so you may not want to do this if you use CD
Recorder software (the constant polling can interrupt the recording
process).


Written by: Annoyances.org
Last updated: Friday, December 14, 2001
 

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