Yes there is I just got it working on my laptop running windows 7 RC. It was not as straight forward as some of the blogs out there have made it sound.
First you have to install the driver found on the CD. Now for me I had to point it to a file in the at the location CommonAppData/Clearwire/ConnectionManager/drivers/wimax/vista/32bit
Once that is installed the Device manager will name the device. Now I do not remember what the name was at this point but there is still a "?" for the device.
Not to worry now you will install a second driver. This time I just pointed the install to the CD. After installing the driver the divice will be named Beceem Communications Inc. Tarang3.
You should be able to run the connection manager now and see the device. Not sure if you have to do these steps in order but that is what worked for me.
A serial infrared transceiver
Not really. After you install new memory, Windows will automatically detect it when you next start the computer.
Plug and play ! The majority of hardware just needs plugging into a USB port, and Windows will either auto-detect and install the drivers, or ask for the disk.
The Scanners and Cameras Wizard The Device Manager The Add Hardware Wizard
Connect your phone using a suitable USB cable. When you plug it in, Windows should detect the device - and either automatcially install drivers for it, or ask for the disk that came with the phone.
There are no viruses that infect Mac OS X so it is impossible to detect a virus. You can use ClamXAV to check if there are Windows viruses that you may be passing onto people using a computer with the Windows operating system. If your Mac software is up to date it will inform you if you have managed to download and install some form of Malware on your Mac.
Windows 98 will detect that a card has been plugged in. Whether or not it can USE it depends on whether the card has Windows 98 drivers available, and if you have installed them correctly. Most wireless A, B, and G cards have Windows 98 drivers, but very few N cards do.
Most computers will 'auto-detect' a printer when it's plugged into a USB port. Windows software includes drivers for most printers, and will install the correct driver for the printer it detects. If it doesn't find a relevant driver - it will ask for an installation disk.
You can. But the Windows installation does not put an entry into it's boot menu, so you have to manually copy a boot sector, and modify the boot menu so you can boot Linux. Linux distributions expect that you may want to dual-boot, so they detect Windows and set up an option for it automatically. For convenience's sake, it is far easier to install Windows first.
Step 1: Stop Protection Center running.Step 2: Locate and detect Protection Center registry entriesHKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\avastui.exe "Debugger" = "svchost.exe" HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\egui.exe "Debugger" = "svchost.exe"HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\ekrn.exe "Debugger" = "svchost.exe"HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\msascui.exe "Debugger" = "svchost.exe"HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\msmpeng.exe "Debugger" = "svchost.exe"HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\msseces.exe "Debugger" = "svchost.exe"HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\SystemRestore "DisableSR " = "1"Step 3: Detect and remove other Protection Center files%UserProfile%\Application Data\[random].exe
The wuauclt exe function is a Microsoft program. It comes with most modern versions of Microsoft Windows, and is its purpose is to detect and download updates to your software.
yes