If the sound on your computer isn't working after a crash, there are several steps you can take to troubleshoot and potentially resolve the issue:
1. Restart Your Computer: Sometimes a simple restart can resolve software-related issues, including sound problems.
2. Check Sound Settings: Ensure that the sound is not muted or turned down in the operating system's sound settings. In Windows, you can access sound settings by right-clicking the speaker icon in the taskbar and selecting "Open Sound settings."
3. Check Device Manager: Open the Device Manager (in Windows, you can do this by right-clicking the Start button and selecting "Device Manager") and check for any yellow exclamation marks or warning symbols next to your audio devices. This could indicate driver issues. Try updating or reinstalling the audio drivers.
4. Reinstall Audio Drivers: If the audio drivers are corrupted or outdated, reinstalling them may help. You can download the latest drivers from the manufacturer's website or use the Device Manager to uninstall the current drivers and then restart your computer to automatically reinstall them.
5. Check Physical Connections: Ensure that your speakers or headphones are properly connected to the correct audio jack on your computer. If you're using external speakers, check that they are powered on and the volume is turned up.
6. Run Audio Troubleshooter: Many operating systems, including Windows, come with built-in audio troubleshooters that can automatically detect and fix common sound issues. You can access these troubleshooters through the Control Panel or Settings menu.
7. Check for Windows Updates: Make sure your operating system is up to date by installing any available Windows updates. Sometimes, updates include fixes for audio-related issues.
8. Check Sound Card: If you have a dedicated sound card installed on your computer, ensure that it is properly seated in its slot on the motherboard. You may also try removing and reinserting the sound card to ensure a good connection.
9. Test with External Devices: If possible, try connecting external speakers or headphones to your computer to see if you can hear sound through them. This can help determine if the issue is with your internal speakers or headphones.
10. Restore System: As a last resort, you may consider restoring your system to a previous restore point before the crash occurred. This can revert any recent changes that may have caused the sound issue.
If none of these steps resolve the problem, it's possible that there could be a hardware issue with your sound card or other components. In such cases, you may need to contact technical support for further assistance or consider having your computer inspected by a professional.
Look on your mother board of your mainboard inside you computer look for the model number and maker and go to there website and go to driver downloads and type in the model number. Then download the latest sound driver and install.
If your machine is a branded one (HP, Fujitsu, Acer, Asus, Lenovo etc), just go to appropriate website, search "support" and there download drivers. Choose the operating system and download and install drivers.
Another way to find the sound driver for Windows 2000, XP, Vista, 7, 8 or 8.1 is to first go to Control Panel. Then ungroup the Control Panel so that it shows large or small icons (grouping makes things harder). Search System icon or Devices icon (usually looks like a computer) and open it. Go to device control and search for unknown devices (those have yellow exclamation mark). Right click on device select "properties". Search Device Instance Id.
There should be a PCI\VEN_XXXX&DEV_YYYY&SUBSYS.... Write down the XXXX and YYYY hex codes. Then write the code to search engine in form XXXX:YYYY, you will find the exact hardware and download the driver for that.
I am having exactly the same problem. Maybe it is a fault with the speakers? Have you tried using them on another computer? If they work on the other computer you need to get new speakers. It could just be your computer which has a fault with it. thanks.
No but it can slow your laptop or computer down a bit. I myself wouldn't go on it because exploring all the downloads I have a slow enough laptop and my computer is completely crashed. Good luck!
sound card
The non-technical term for the sudden failure of a computer is "crashed".
Make sure the volume on the speakers is turned up, also the volume icon on the task bar should be turned up. Before all That If the sound card is on the motherboard make sure its enabled in BIOS, and all the drivers are installed, you can do that from device manager, If all that is OK uninstall the sound driver and re-install it. if its a PCI sound card uninstall it , Restart your computer and re-install the driver.
If your work computer gets a virus it can crash and once crashed you can't work anymore.
try uninstalling itunes then reinstalling it and see if it will work.....
The plane has chrashed; Flyet styrtede ned. My computer crashed; Min computer gik ned.The car crashed into the wall; Bilen smadrede i væggen.
Well, do you have cats? If so, just have the cat prounce on it a little. It seemed to work for me very well. NO JOKE.
Check if the required specifications match what your computer has installed.
sound travels from the computer to the speakers where sound waves pick up and the sound gets played
Because the owner (andrew) his computer crashed with all the files and cant get his computer fixed so and i havent herd form in ages so ?
oovoo .. it depends on your computer but it completely crashed mine but it has no viruses
Your computer didn't crash "due to" a mini-dump; it crashed for some other reason, and the "mini-dump" contains some error messages that your computer saved to explain WHY it crashed. There are "mini-dump" viewer programs that can often show you WHY your computer crashed, and that may be the information you need to fix the problem. For example, the mini-dump file may indicate that a device driver failed, such as a video driver or network interface. Knowing what crashed can allow you to know which driver needs to be updated.
You could write it as "thud" or "crash".
i got the original hypercam... so far it has not crashed my computer
your computer has crashed