We recently purchased and installed a new Windows 11 PC at a client. Originally it was ordered with a home version, but we upgraded it to pro via the windows store. Everything has gone smooth, but now we are getting an error after setting up the printer, when we try to print. The printers install fine and are reachable on the network.
One is hardwired and other is wireless, and I have tried both IP printing and letting windows find it. I have installed drivers from the manufacture website and via the windows 11 automatic detection. I've completely removed the driver packages and tried to reinstall. The machines are from different manufacturers. There is nothing in Event Viewer to indicate a problem. I've tried the basics like running the print diagnostic, restarting the spooler, etc.
Thanks for the reply, it was 2 different Manufacturers so I knew it wasn't an issue with the printers. I did check windows update as well. The issue turned out to be that someone at our office disabled network printing in the Firewall package that was rolled out to the user.
The switch for Bluetooth disappeared. I uninstalled it in the device manager and scanned for hardware changes, but it didn't reinstall. I manually reinstalled the drivers from intel's website and it still won't show up. Under services there are three Bluetooth related items all running on automatic. When I run the Bluetooth trouble shooter it says my computer doesn't have Bluetooth. My computer says everything is up to date and so are the drivers.
Thanks, in your case the restore may be what solved the problem. But still I gained great insight from your comment. You are the one who pointed me to the right direction(BIOS) where I found Bluetooth unchecked. I enabled it and installed latest drivers. Hurray! I now have Bluetooth.
Thanks so much for the update. My Bluetooth connection just disappeared.
What I did was to go F12 > BIOS > WIRELESS. Both my WLAN and Bluetooth is checked.
I just unchecked and checked again > APPLY.
I had noticed that my bios diagnostics said that no Bluetooth was installed. So I assumed my Bluetooth internal device must have had a hardware failure. But I was pleasantly surprised when this approach of using the restore old settings in bios fixed it.
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This is supper. I did not know that Bluetooth can be enabled or disabled from Bios setup utility. I found the check box for Bluetooth unchecked. I ticked it and immediately the computer restarted, dell support assistant suggested driver update which I did and my Bluetooth worked immediately. Prior to this I had tried windows as well as dell troubleshooter which both showed I was running the lates drivers. Windows showed that Bluetooth is not available on this device while dell said the machine is out of warranty hence they cannot assist. Thanks man.
Bluetooth Handsfree Service.
Bluetooth Audio Gateway Service.
Bluetooth Support Service.
Bluetooth User Support Service.
Right-click on the services listed above and click on Properties.
I can say that it seems that out of the box there will be a multi-touch API, which is what you should find available in the Win 7 RC SDK linked in Tim J's answer. In addition WPF 4.0 will include multi-touch APIs and controls which it would seem that the Surface SDK 2.0 will extend/build upon.
The easiest option is to develop for Multi-Touch is with Silverlight on Win7. I have a small application developed in Silverlight on an HP TouchSmart with Win7 on it. -3-multi-touch-with-windows.htmlWhen the application runs you can make the Browser in Kiosk mode(Full Screen)But if you are looking for very advanced features outside Silverlight, then go ahead with Win7 SDK.
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