Every time Zoom accesses my camera, the light comes on and then WIndows 11 gives me a blue screen error (BSOD).. This occurs when I try to access Video settings, Background setting, click an invitation to a meeting, or enter meeting specifics manually.
I'm chasing a similar bluescreen error on a Dell Precision laptop and found from the dump logs that the issue is likely DirectX related. I came to this conclusion because dxgmms2.sys came up in the dump log next to watchdog.sys and ntoskrnl.exe. If your issue is also directX related, a few things to try:
- Disabling Hardware Acceleration (Settings > Video > Advanced > "Use hardware acceleration for..."
Ok, there really isn't a "solution" here, despite the tag. Replacing the screen -- for using zoom? That is like using a cannon to shoot a fly. Great that it worked for DesDekker, but there must be another way. Here is something that I found. The problem seems to be the camera, not zoom. Go to "settings", search for "video", click on "change default settings for your camera" (a Logitech B910 in my case). Once I click on that camera, I get a blue screen and the system crashes. (BTW, I couldn't find "Settings > Video > Advanced ...", as recommended by bumbling_Wizard). So, now that I know it is the camera, let me search for a solution. Isolating the problem is the first step, so I figured it is useful to share it here.
Ok, I solved it --- and the solution was embarrassingly simple. The camera was not plugged into a USB port. So, apparently, when trying to use it, that crashes the system (bad, bad software! C'est la vie). I plugged it into a (functioning) USB port and voila: all works. If that doesn't do the trick for you, try another USB port. If that still does not work, I suggest to search for "device" to open the Device Manager, find "Sound, video and game controllers" and right-click on your camera. "Update" the driver. Or, for a more radical step, "Uninstall device" and reboot: upon reboot, the system will reinstall it, with an appropriate driver. I hope one of these works for you. Good luck.
If you have a password, it is hashed so you will need to launch the meeting once in the browser and copy it out. Once you have your hashed password, add &pwd= after your conference number (with no spaces).
this is the easy and quick wayBut remember to that it will open the browser and browser will pop up and msg saying "Lunch Meeting In Zoom App" which leads to the opening of zoom app. So if you tick always open with app .You are ready to go.
I like your answer @Seor CMasMas, but instead of a shortcut I'm using a scheduled task to start zoom.exe and using the --url as the arguments, as many of my meetings are recurring. So I want them to automatically pop them up for me, as time is always slipping by when I'm not paying attention.
Zoom may have changed something since these answers were posted. I was unable to get any of the formats for opening a password-locked room open on osX -- hashed, unhashed, using the --url scheme -- zoom would open but not go to the room.
The essential part is that the script parses out three fields from a typical Zoom link: The host, the meeting ID, and the hashed password. Then I just run zoom with the option of a Zoom meeting URL of the format "zoommtg://[host]/join?action=join&confno=[meeting id]&pwd=[password hash]"
The script does a little extra to make sure my DISPLAY is set (in case I'm running this from something like the 'at' queue) and to verify that the URL is in the expected format with a regular expression match.
I have Teams rooms set up with HP Slices in 3 of our offices, but many of our customers use Zoom as their meeting service. Is there a way to join a Zoom meeting easily from the Teams hardware we have installed?
We have a Crestron Flex MTR and it's been working great for Teams, Zoom and WebEx meetings. For Zoom meetings, the system displays content on one screen and participants on the other, but for Zoom and WebEx, it puts everyone on one screen. There is a option in Zoom to utilize two screen.
@Graham Walsh Hi Graham - do you know if the ability to join Zoom/WebEx meetings is available via something like a Poly TC8 (i.e. Android based Teams Rooms devices) as opposed to Windows based devices like the Poly GC8?
@Graham Walsh found today that meetings created in Webex as a personal room meeting work fine sent as guest join to an MTR. The join button is formatted as "company.webex.com/meet/my.name". Meetings created in a Webex Space that format the join button as "company.webex.com/m/gibberish" do not work when an MTR is invited. I tried re-formatting the hyperlink, changing the "m" to "meet" but that didn't work either. I also note that some Webex Spaces create meetings with a "company.webex.com" link and some create meetings with a "web.ciscospark.com" link. I can't seem to find the logic/common denominator on the difference in the Spaces but neither of them work as guest join on an MTR anyway.
we are facing problems to join Zoom Meetings from a Lenovo Thinksmart HUB 500. We have already gone through this article:
-us/microsoftteams/rooms/third-party-join
We have no problems with zoom.us invitation links. We cannot join meetings with .zoom.us. URL rewrite is not enabled. As mentioned, we have everything configured as mentioned in the article. Hope someone here is aware of the issue.
I was now able to test this on site. It worked from the Edge browser. I have another question Graham.
From time to time, we get feedback from users that joining Zoom meetings is not possible. We have been able to find a corresponding log in the DeviceLogs in this path "1626162649_SRSv2-xxxxx-2021-07-13T09.43.10_02\ThirdPartyLog\ThirdParty.txt". Is there any possibility to increase the LogLevel (for instance to Debug) to get more information than what can be found in the mentioned log?
*Note the password setting. This cannot be turned off. Recipients who do not have a zoom account will be prompted to enter in the password and a meeting ID. The password and meeting ID is automatically sent to your recipients in the description field of your meeting invitation:
One such tool is Snagit, which is available for both Mac and Windows. Snagit allows you to take screenshots of your entire screen, selected regions, or specific windows. It also has several editing features that you can use to annotate your screenshots.
There you have it! There are different ways to take screenshots of your Zoom meeting, from using built-in screenshot shortcuts on your computer to third-party software with more functionality. But if you want to take notes along with your screenshot on a Zoom meeting and keep everything in one place, Tactiq is your best bet.
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In a Zoom meeting, when you share your screen, your Zoom windows and control bar are typically not included in the share view. You may wish to include them, especially if you are showing someone else how to use the features of Zoom. To make this happen, you must configure BOTH the browser and the Zoom app.
Where did you install Firefox from? Help Mozilla uncover 3rd party websites that offer problematic Firefox installation by taking part in our campaign. There will be swag, and you'll be featured in our blog if you manage to report at least 10 valid reports!
There is no reason I can find that a Zoom Meeting window opens every time I open Firefox -- I even signed up for Zoom so I could make sure it didn't show I had any meetings scheduled recurring or otherwise. But having done that and rebooted -- a Zoom Meeting window opens asking me to join a nonexistent recurring meeting where it indicates it is waiting for the host to initiate the meeting. Takes forever (it seems). How can I end this problem?
Scan your antivirus. If it is windows, then use a full scan of windows defender, Mac or linux, download mcafee antivirus scanner. -us.../mcafee-total-protection-trial.htmlHope this helps!-Zombieslayer57
Sure would appreciate a little help with my inquiry. I participate in Zoom meetings and the meeting it keeps trying to open is with someone I know. There isn't a meeting going on and I'm not asking to join any meeting -- but the Zoom window keeps opening and requiring me to close it. Help!
Please use more than 1 scanner as each uses diff tech : -US/kb/troubleshoot-firefox-issues-caused-malware Save your Report and google each before deleting anything as do not want to delete something you need,If need help : -im-infected-what-do-i-do-now/ Post in only 1 forum, then wait.
Thanks for trying to be helpful, but Zoom was not set to start when Windows initiates, nor was the setting to "Silently start Zoom when I start Windows", so while I know Zoom has nothing to do with Firefox -- the only time it happens is when I use Firefox. And I don't use any other web browser. The only expectation I had was that I might get a little help because my teenager said I should ask. That's all. I'll try to figure it out.
In Firefox 56 and earlier, with the old "new tab page," sometimes a tile from history would trigger an odd behavior such a message that Firefox wanted to launch a different application. The approach to that was to remove any tiles that might trigger the unwanted behavior. I don't know if that is an issue with the new "Activity Stream" page, or whether you have that page as your home page.
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