|  | Hi,
	I have seen the same thing on these laptops with PW95 and PW32. Here's what I have 
found.
	The first time I had one of these machines I installed PW95a. After rebooting the 
machine it would get halfway through its boot and power down. This happens just after the 
machine has recognized the PCMCIA cards. When I powered the machine back up it would start in 
safe mode and was effectivly dead.
	I managed to get hold of another machine and this time I installed PW32 and the
same thing happened. 
	BTW. These machines are brand new with the factory installed Windows 95B. When 
installing PathWorks I chose a custom install and installed VT320 and LAT.
	After the second machine came up in safe mode I started looking in the registry and 
found under \HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\VXD the following Keys had 
been added DECCORE, DECIOCB, DECLAT, DECNDIS, DECLMAP, and DECSHOW I deleted all of these 
keys, rebooted and the machine came up okay. After a few more reboots I found that by removing 
DECCORE and DECIOCB the machine would boot okay, except LAT wasn't available.
	These 2 keys DECCORE and DECIOCB load deccore.vxd and deciocb.vxd. I think there is a 
conflict with these VXD's and the Phoenix Card Manager. I have installed PW95a / PW32 on 
desktops running Win95B and on old HiNotes and Ultra's with no problems.
	I've looked through PW32 release notes, throught the PathWorks and DECPC_Portable 
confrences, and on the web Comet, AltaVista etc but can't find any info. Has anyone seen this 
or know of updated drivers to fix the problem.
	I copied the PW32 kit from JAMIN::PW32:
	With regard to 2371.0 if you are running Windows 95 have a look in the registry under 
\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\VXD and see if DECCORE and DECIOCB are 
present. If so try removing them (it's a good idea to export VXD tree first). Your machine 
should start okay but I don't know if it will find a licence. Hope this helps.
Regards,
	Ken Jeffreys
 | 
|  |   <<< Note 2371.1 by SNOFS1::dhcp-172-128-32.dhcp.sno.dec.com::Ken Jeffreys >>>
                         -< I've seen the same thing >-
Hi,
I have seen the same thing on these laptops with PW95 and PW32. Here's what
I have  found.
The first time I had one of these machines I installed PW95a. After
rebooting the  machine it would get halfway through its boot and power
down. This happens just after the  machine has recognized the PCMCIA cards.
When I powered the machine back up it would start in  safe mode and was
effectivly dead.
I managed to get hold of another machine and this time I installed PW32 and
the same thing happened. 
BTW. These machines are brand new with the factory installed Windows 95B.
When  installing PathWorks I chose a custom install and installed VT320 and
LAT.
After the second machine came up in safe mode I started looking in the
registry and  found under
\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\VXD the following
Keys had  been added DECCORE, DECIOCB, DECLAT, DECNDIS, DECLMAP, and
DECSHOW I deleted all of these  keys, rebooted and the machine came up
okay. After a few more reboots I found that by removing  DECCORE and
DECIOCB the machine would boot okay, except LAT wasn't available.
These 2 keys DECCORE and DECIOCB load deccore.vxd and deciocb.vxd. I think
there is a  conflict with these VXD's and the Phoenix Card Manager. I have
installed PW95a / PW32 on  desktops running Win95B and on old HiNotes and
Ultra's with no problems.
I've looked through PW32 release notes, throught the PathWorks and
DECPC_Portable  confrences, and on the web Comet, AltaVista etc but can't
find any info. Has anyone seen this  or know of updated drivers to fix the
problem.
I copied the PW32 kit from JAMIN::PW32:
With regard to 2371.0 if you are running Windows 95 have a look in the
registry under  \HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\VXD
and see if DECCORE and DECIOCB are  present. If so try removing them (it's
a good idea to export VXD tree first). Your machine  should start okay but
I don't know if it will find a licence. Hope this helps.
Regards,
	Ken Jeffreys
 |