"Autoplay" causes the partition to be lost

  
        

The following is my personal experience. What I want to say here is that you should not have too strong dependence. Some difficulties, calm down and think about it, or usually pay more attention to reading a book is not difficult to solve.

Accident Double-click to open the D drive, a "Find" dialog box appears, ask for the path required to open the "setup.exe" program, and an "AutoPlay" function is added to the right-click menu. After

reasons to download and install and upgrade the graphics driver appeared above symptoms.

The road to solution Since I purchased a branded computer, I first called the store to find a solution. The young man is very enthusiastic, saying that you download a "super rabbit magic setting" to try, the result is of course not.

So, I called the customer service center again. The operator listened to me. You must have installed the virtual CD-ROM drive. After uninstalling it, the problem will be solved. Immediately, the "Dongfang CD-ROM magician" was unloaded. ", the problem is still the same, but unfortunately I spent time and effort on the virtual English learning CD!

Don't give up, call another store. The other party said that you used the SFC file checker. I said that I have tried it. He said that it is very troublesome to move the registry, since it does not affect the use. You will use it, or you will reinstall the system, the door-to-door service will cost 180 yuan, and can only restore you to the state of the factory - reinstall the system? What to do with the valuable information accumulated in my computer! Is this the after-sales service of brand computers? This has aroused my ambition.

Think about it too. In the past, when the computer went wrong, the first thing that comes to mind first is to call someone for help. Why not try to solve it yourself? Dynamic registry? Usually people say that it is best not to move it, and I have never dared to move. But this time, I have "Windows Optimizer", I will back up before moving the registry!

Open the "Windows Optimizer", select the registration information to clean, then select the backup, fully automatic operation, even the backup path is not used, in case of mistakes, press the recovery, you can restore to the time status. And, there are detailed records and path descriptions in the optimized maintenance log. Is there any good software to help me, and what are you afraid of? Click "Start Run", enter "regedit" to open the Registry Editor, then click "Edit", enter "AutoPlay" in the "Find" box...

Haha! Sure enough, "autorun=autoplay", "open=setup.exe", "icon=Fwrite.ico" and other key values ​​appear on the screen - I delete!

As a result, the D drive has returned to the familiarity of me, and the problem seems to be solved. However, the next day when I turned on the computer, the problem still existed! what happened? After careful consideration, I suddenly realized that yesterday's operation was accurate, but I used Windows 98. Today, Windows 98 automatically restores the registry from its own backup during the boot self-test. What does this mean? Explain that there are related files associated with these deleted registry keys, and one-to-one correspondence!

The video card program I downloaded is on the D drive. Look carefully, and I found an "autorun" folder in the root directory. Opening the content inside is exactly what I am going to delete! Don't say anything, delete! Then repeat the operation of yesterday and delete those key values ​​in the registry.

At this point, the problem was finally solved completely, and I secretly smiled. First, I know that after this experience, my computer level has increased a small step, and the second is to eliminate the mystery of the registry.

Considerations advise those who download software frequently, do not directly download the D, F, E and other drive letters, but to develop good habits, store them in a neat way like "D:download ", "F: eifen" and other folders, and I just found the trouble because I put the downloaded graphics driver in the root directory of the D drive.

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