Missing Multimedia Audio Controller in a Windows Server 2003 Guest

If an Internet connection is not available while installing a Windows Server 2003 guest, the driver for the multimedia audio controller is not installed. The Windows Device Manager indicates that the driver for the multimedia audio controller is missing. To install the required driver, configure an Internet connection, and run Windows Update on the Windows Server 2003 virtual machine.

Windows Server 2003

You can install Windows Server 2003 in a virtual machine using the corresponding Windows Server 2003 distribution CD.

Before you begin, verify that the following tasks are complete:

 Read “General Installation Instructions for All VMware Products” on page.

 Create and configure a new virtual machine.

 If you are using the virtual LSI Logic SCSI adapter, Windows Server 2003 installs the SCSI driver when you install the guest operating system. If you are using the virtual BusLogic SCSI adapter, you need a special SCSI driver available from the download section of the VMware Web site at  www.vmware.com/download. Follow the instructions on the Web site to use the driver with a fresh installation of Windows Server 2003.

 If you have a virtual machine with a SCSI virtual disk and an earlier Windows guest operating system and want to upgrade it to Windows Server 2003, install the new SCSI driver before upgrading the operating system.

 Manually configure the e1000 network adapter driver in ESX 3.0.2 to support Windows Server 2003
Datacenter Edition. Refer to knowledge base article 1003020 at http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1003020.

Installation Steps

1. Insert the Windows Server 2003 CD in the CD‐ROM drive.

2. Power on the virtual machine to start installing Windows Server 2003.

3. If you are using the virtual BusLogic SCSI driver downloaded from the VMware Web site, you must add an additional driver.

    a. As the Windows Server 2003 installer loads, press the F6 key.

    This allows you to select the additional SCSI driver required for installation.

    b. Press S to specify the additional driver.

    c. Press Enter to continue with the installation.

4. Follow the prompts to complete the installation.

5. Install VMware Tools.

   After installation, consider the following support and configuration issues for a Windows Server 2003 guest.

Screen Resolution in a Windows Vista Guest

After installing VMware Tools on a Windows Vista Service Pack (SP1) virtual machine, the screen resolution does not change to 1024 by 768 pixels automatically. See VMware Knowledge Base article 1004780 at http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1004780 for information on modifying the screen resolution manually.

Missing Multimedia Audio Controller in a Windows Vista Guest

If an Internet connection is not available while installing a 32‐bit Windows Vista guest, the driver for the
multimedia audio controller is not installed. The Windows Device Manager indicates that the driver for the
multimedia audio controller is missing. To install the required driver, configure an Internet connection, and
run Windows Update on the Windows Vista virtual machine.

Windows Vista

You can install Windows Vista in a virtual machine using the corresponding Windows Vista distribution CD.

Before you begin, verify that the following tasks are complete:

 Read “General Installation Instructions for All VMware Products” on page.

 Create and configure a new virtual machine.

 Virtual machine. 512MB or more of RAM.

 Host computer. 512MB or more of RAM.

Installation Steps

1. Insert the Windows Vista CD in the CD‐ROM drive.

2. Power on the virtual machine to start installing Windows Vista.

3. Follow the prompts to complete the installation.

4. Install VMware Tools.

5. (Optional) On VMware Fusion, install Boot Camp drivers so that the guest operating system can access hardware devices on the physical machine.

Refer to knowledge base article 1012885 at http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1012885 for more information.
After installation, consider the following support and configuration issues for a Windows Vista guest.

Windows Server 2008

You can install the Windows Server 2008 in a virtual machine using the Windows Server 2008 distribution CD.

Before you begin, verify that the following tasks are complete:

 Read “General Installation Instructions for All VMware Products” on page.

 Create and configure a new virtual machine.

 Virtual machine. 512MB or more of RAM.

 Host computer. 512MB or more of RAM.

Consider these support and configuration issues for Windows Server 2008:

 If an Internet connection is not available while installing a 32‐bit Windows Server 2008 guest, the driver for the multimedia audio controller will not be installed. The Windows Device Manager will indicate that the driver for the multimedia audio controller is missing. To install the required driver, configure an Internet connection, and run Windows Update on the Windows Server 2008 virtual machine.

 ESX supports the Server Core role available in the Standard, Datacenter, and Enterprise editions of
Windows 2008 Server. VMware Tools still apply, unless Server Core disables parts of the operating system that are specifically supported by VMware Tools. See the Microsoft Developer Network Web site for more information about Server Core: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en‐us/library /ms723891(VS.85).aspx

Installation Steps

1. Insert the Windows Server 2008 CD in the CD‐ROM drive.

2. Power on the virtual machine to start installing Windows Server 2008.

3. Follow the prompts to complete the installation.

4. Install VMware Tools.

Windows Server 2008 R2

You can install the Windows Server 2008 R2 in a virtual machine using the Windows Server 2008 R2
distribution CD.

Before you begin, verify that the following tasks are complete:

 Read “General Installation Instructions for All VMware Products” on page.

 Create and configure a new virtual machine.

 Virtual machine. 512MB or more of RAM.

 Host computer. 512MB or more of RAM.

Installation Steps

1. Insert the Windows Server 2008 R2 CD in the CD‐ROM drive.

2. Power on the virtual machine to start installing Windows Server 2008 R2.

3. Follow the prompts to complete the installation.

4. Install VMware Tools.

Windows Recovery Environment

Read “General Installation Instructions for All VMware Products” on page.

For instructions specific to the Windows Recovery Environment, see the accompanying operating system
documentation.

VMware Tools in Windows Recovery Environment

There is no version of VMware Tools that supports Windows Recovery Environment.

VMware Tools Support in Windows Preinstallation Environment

VMware Tools does not support Windows Preinstallation Environment.

Windows Preinstallation Environment

Before you begin, verify that the following tasks are complete:

 Read “General Installation Instructions for All VMware Products” on page.

 Create and configure a new virtual machine. During virtual machine creation, select Windows Vista for
the guest operating system. A Windows PE selection is not available.

 Download and install Windows AIK 1.1 (WAIK1.1) software (build from Windows Server 2008 kernel)
from the Microsoft Web site: http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?familyid=94BB6E34‐D890‐4932‐81A5‐5B50C657DE08&displaylang=en

 Create a Windows PE 2.1 ISO image.

Windows 7

Install Windows 7 in a virtual machine using the corresponding Windows 7 distribution CD.
Before you begin, verify that the following tasks are complete:

 Read “General Guidelines for Supported Guests” on page.

 Create and configure a new virtual machine.

 Virtual machine. 1GB or more of RAM for 32‐bit guests and 2GB or more of RAM for 64‐bit guests.

Installation Steps

1. Insert the Windows 7 CD or DVD in the CD‐ROM drive.

2. Turn on the virtual machine to begin installing Windows 7.

3. (Optional) If you are using VMware Paravirtual as the default SCSI controller, you can install Windows 7 32‐bit using pvscsi-windows2003.flp driver and Windows 7 64‐bit using pvscsi-windows2008.flp driver.

4. Follow the prompts to complete the installation.

5. Install VMware Tools.

6. (Optional) On VMware Fusion, install Boot Camp drivers so that the guest operating system can access hardware devices on the physical machine.

Windows 7 32‐ bit supports only Boot Camp 3 drivers and Windows 7 64‐bit requires Boot Camp drivers to be installed individually.

Refer to knowledge base article 1012885 at http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1012885 for more information.

ISO Installation

Rather than booting from a physical CD‐ROM, you can create an ISO image file from the installation CD‐ROM. You can store the ISO file on the host machine or on a network drive accessible from the host machine. Use the configuration tool for your VMware product to connect the virtual machine CD drive to the ISO image file, and turn on the virtual machine.

Using an ISO image file is convenient to install the same operating system in multiple virtual machines. It can also help you avoid a problem in host configurations, in which the virtual machine cannot boot from the installation CD‐ROM.

PXE Installation

If you plan to use a PXE server to install the guest operating system over the network, you do not need the operating system installation media. When you turn on the virtual machine, the virtual machine detects the PXE server.

PXE booting is supported for guest operating systems that are listed in the VMware Guest Operating System Compatibility list and whose operating system vendor supports PXE booting of the operating system.

Typical Installation

The basic steps to install a typical operating system:

1. Start your VMware product and connect to the virtual machine.

2. Insert the installation CD‐ROM or disc of the guest operating system in to the CD‐ROM or disc drive
connected to the virtual machine.

 ESX Server 2.x. You must insert the installation CD‐ROM or disc in the drive on the server where the virtual machine is running. You cannot use the drives on the management workstation.

 GSX Server. If your guest operating system requires a disc, you must insert it in the drive on the
server where the virtual machine is running. You cannot use the disc drive on the management
workstation.

3. Turn on your virtual machine by clicking Power On.

4. Follow the instructions provided by the operating system vendor.

As with physical computers, operating systems require separate licenses for each virtual machine that you run.

Some Microsoft Windows OEM discs included with new computers are customized for those computers and include device drivers and other utilities specific to the hardware system. Even if you can install that Windows operating system on your physical computer, you might not be able to install it in a virtual machine. You might need to purchase a new copy of Windows to install in a virtual machine.

5. Install VMware Tools.

64-Bit Linux Guests and Execute Disable Functionality

When running a 64‐bit Linux guest operating system on EM64T hardware, make sure that you have Execute Disable functionality enabled in the host BIOS. This functionality helps to ensure that the Linux guest operating system runs without interruption.

VMware Tools

VMware Tools must be installed in most guest operating systems. For an overview of VMware Tools and for a list of the manuals that contain installation instructions for VMware Tools, see knowledge base article 340 at http://kb.vmware.com/kb/340.

Determining Memory Settings for a Virtual Machine

When you configure the memory settings for a virtual machine, you should consult the documentation for the guest operating system you plan to run in that virtual machine. The user interface of your VMware product provides general guidelines for the amount of memory required. If the interface and the operating system documentation do not agree, you should rely on the operating system documentation.

Using Sound Adapters on GSX and VMware Servers

Sound adapters by default are not installed in a virtual machine for GSX or VMware Servers. To add a sound adapter, use the virtual machine settings editor (VM > Settings) after you have installed the operating system. For instructions on configuring sound for a virtual machine on a GSX or VMware Server, see the
corresponding server documentation.

Running a Guest Operating System

For information about running a guest operating system and using its features, see the documentation
provided by the operating system vendor.

General Guidelines for Supported Guests

Configurations, support, and hardware influence how you install a supported guest operating system.

Operating Systems That the Operating System Vendor No Longer Supports

For operating systems listed in this guide that the operating system vendor no longer supports, VMware
might, at its sole discretion, provide support and fixes to VMware products to address problems that are
exposed by running such operating systems on a VMware virtual machine. VMware is not responsible for
resolving problems with or providing support or fixes to the operating system itself.

Installing Guest Operating Systems

The Guest Operating System Installation Guide includes installation instructions for installing supported guest operating systems on the following VMware products:

 VMware ESX Server 2.0 and later

 VMware ESXi/ESX 3.5 and later

 VMware Workstation 4.0 and later

 VMware Server 1.0 and later

 VMware Fusion1.0 and later

 VMware ACE 1.0 and later

 VMware GSX Server 3.0 and later

If you are using VMware® Workstation 3.x, VMware GSX Server 2.x, VMware ESX Server 1.x or an earlier VMware product, see the user’s manual that came with your product for installation instructions for the guest operating systems supported by that product.

Operating systems that are not included in this guide are not supported.

See “General Installation Instructions for All VMware Products” on page for information that might apply to the guest you are installing and see “Latest Updates” on page 11 for the most recent changes to this guide.

General Installation Instructions for All VMware Products

Installing a guest operating system in a virtual machine is essentially the same as installing it on a physical
computer.

Before installing a guest operating system, create a virtual machine and ensure that its devices are setup correctly. For example, install networking software when you install the guest operating system, and configure and enable the Ethernet adapter for the virtual machine.

The tool or interface you used to configure the virtual machine depends on the VMware product you are
running.

A new virtual machine is like a physical computer with a blank hard disk. Before you can use it, you must partition and format the virtual disk and install an operating system. The operating system installation program might handle the partitioning and formatting steps for you.

NOTE You should disable screen savers that might be running on the host system before you install the guest operating system.

Windows PE 2.1 ISO image Installation Steps

Installation Steps

1. Boot the virtual machine from a Windows PE 2.1 ISO image.

After the boot process completes, a command prompt appears.

2. Use Windows PE to prepare your virtual machine to install a Windows operating system.

To Create a Windows PE 2.1 ISO Image

1. Select Start > All Programs > Microsoft Windows AIK > Windows PE Tools Command Prompt to open the Windows PE Tools Command Prompt.

2. Type one of the following commands to create a Windows PE build environment for an x86 or amd64
machine in the winpe-x86 folder.

         Platform                              Command

         32‐bit                                   copype x86 C:\Winpe-x86

         64‐bit                                   copype amd64 C:\Winpe-amd64

3. Create a Windows PE 2.1 bootable ISO image by entering the following command:

oscdimg -n -h -bc:\winpe-x86\etfsboot.com c:\winpe-x86\iso c:\winpe-x86\winpe-x86.iso

Installation Steps

1. Boot the virtual machine from a Windows PE 2.1 ISO image.

After the boot process completes, a command prompt appears.

2. Use Windows PE to prepare your virtual machine to install a Windows operating system.

Network Send Mail Issue

I am unable to send mail from my Thunderbird mail or any other mail client over a wireless network. I have full access to the w/l network I am using ( home network at my daughters) but when I try to send an e-mail I get the following error:

"An error occurred sending mail: The mail server sent an incorrect greeting: edtncm03 bizsmtp ESMTP server not available, your ip is balcklisted by spamhaus. Go tohttp://www.spamhaus.org/query/bl?ip=70.68.36.14."

When I click on OK for this error I get another one:

"Sending of message failed.
The message could not be sent because the connection to SMTP server smtp.telus.net was lost in the middle of the transaction. Try again or contact your network administrator."

Receiving of e-mail's works fine as well as all other internet functions. I am using a IMAP server for incoming mail and a smtp server for outgoing mails.

I have double, triple checked all incoming and outgoing settings and security/authentication settings and they are correct.

This one's got me stumped, my only guess is that is may be something to do with the home wireless setup.

any suggstions on what to look for would be appreciated.

Using TB 3.1.9 on a Windows 7 64bit OS.
 



______________________________________________________________________


"your ip is blacklisted by spamhaus" that's a pretty big hint to what the problem is Or, 

Is your daughter using a different ISP then your account SMPT settings? If so, you need to change your SMPT setting to match hers.
 


________________________________________________________________________

Thanks Steve, I think the problem is with the ISP although I don't know why they would be blacklisted as Telus is the major ISP for BC and Alberta in Canada. I tied sending an e-mail from the Telus webmail site and get the same error. I use an IMAP server which syncs my email folders and when I compose and save a draft it goes out to the server drafts folder but when I go to send the note I get the blacklisted errror. Seems like the problem exists after the emails leave the Telus server.

All other internet functions/browsing etc. work fine.

One further note, when I use my Mobile Internet Stick the e-mail works fine, which indicates to me that the ISP is not blacklisted. So I think your suggestion about the out going SMTP settings may be right.

I will leave this for now and tackle the problem when I get home if it still exists. 

Connection drops when in PPPOE but ok in Bridge mode

Hi. Im using a Dlink 2640b adsl modem+router. I am having this problem for some time. I put my connection on pppoe mode. The connection stays fine for an hour, maybe 2 or sometimes it remains for 5 hours. After than, the green light becomes solid and then goes off. I have to restart my modem to get my net back.

I tried switching to bridge mode and dial from my pc. The connection then doesnt break and is fine. But I dont want to dial. Does anyone know where the problem might lie ? I will flash a older firmware tonight, but i really need to know if anyone has a solution to this horrific problem. 

Before anyone blames my router, I used a Huawei modem before. It had the same problem. I gave that router to my bro in law, and he used it saying it was working fine. I even took out a new telephone line incase there was a problem with the line. MY net provider says there isnt any problem with the line. HELP !!!
 



___________________________________________________________________


Where are you located & which ISP?
You should not need PPoE nor Bridged for DSL, just a standard ethernet connection.
PPoE is configured on the router, not your computer.


___________________________________________________________________

Issues connecting to Hotmail; Volume Overlay not displaying.

how's it going? I've just had my computer cleaned with Broni, and everything seems to be a-okay. However, I'm having a few other non-malware related issues that seem to be plaguing me, and I cannot figure out how to fix them for the life of me... Broni recommended I come here for help! 

1. I cannot seem to load up www.Hotmail.com on my laptop. I've tried it with FF and IE, with no dice. I can load it up and login perfectly fine on any other computer, but for some reason every time I try to go there on my laptop, it just times out... Any ideas?

2. Normally, when I press my Volume Up/Down keys, a semi-transparent overlay with a meter for the volume level appears, and it suddenly stopped working. I mean, the volume changes levels, it's just that the overlay no longer appears... Any ideas?

Thanks for the help!


_____________________________________________________________________

Can you ping hotmail.com ?

Also check your hosts file in Windows directory for any redirection.
 

_______________________________________________________________________

I can't ping Hotmail. When I try to, it times out with 100% packet loss. Also, how do I check out the hosts file? I've found two of them, strangely enough, one with 27 bytes and the other one with 824 bytes. But I have no clue what to do with them, or how to check them for redirects.

As for reinstalling my keyboard software... How would I go about that? I don't have the Win7 Installation disk with me, if that were needed, so how should I do this.

_____________________________________________________________________
There should be only one hosts file in the following location :

C:\Windows\System32\Drivers\etc

Open it in Notepad & copy contents over here.
 

_____________________________________________________________________
Alright, well, I located the single file there, and it only contained one line:

127.0.0.1 localhost


I'm thinking that the second file I had located earlier must be related to something else, such as a game or something... But I do have an update. At my university, we have multiple wireless connections around campus, and in my dorm building, when I bypass the router and actually use an ethernet cable, I can connect to Hotmail and other places perfectly fine, as well as log into Steam. And then, when I connected to the wireless connection, my problems resumed, with the inability to connect to Hotmail.

That was yesterday.

Today, while connecting to the wireless connection in one of the other buildings on campus, I connected to Hotmail with no problems, and I logged into Steam as well... Perhaps for some reason my laptop is blocking certain ports for some reason when connecting to certain networks? I'm not an expert on this kind of stuff, so tell me what ya' think.

_______________________________________________________________________

Its not your laptop but your wifi router/access point that is blocking sites. Talk to the person who is in charge of networking on the campus, only he would be able to help you out. 
________________________________________________________________________

Yeah, that's what I was thinking. I tried logging back onto hotmail once I got back into my dorm, and I couldn't log onto those pages anymore wirelessly, so it must be an issue on their end... The only thing that confuses me is that my roommate has no issues whatsoever when going to those sites...  

New router to connect to existing DSL broadband connection

I'm attempting to set up wife's laptop to my existing [wired ] broadband connection.

Existing connection has iinet BELKIN modem/router & has been working for a couple of years.

Last month bought a wireless router. Netgear RT-N10

My son setup the wireless router as an 'access point' with an
access code [ or whatever you call it ] for security.

after some farting around, M$ knowledge base articles etc re wireless zero
connection, the laptop show's the following in "wireless network connection"
----------------------------------------------------------------
Ian's ASUS AUtomatic
security enabled wireless network (WPA2) 
---------------------------------------------------
linksys
security enabled wireless network (WPA) 
--------------------------------------------------- 


When i try to connect to "connect" to either network the connection doesn't work.


Any suggestions?

event viewers?
network utilities ?


Ian C

P.S. i've been playing with mainframe computers since 1963 
& pc's etc since 1970's- 1980's.
But thesedays mostly i leave the techo stuff to son Adam,
but he ( & Anita ) have three month old twins and get a bit busy<grin>
 



__________________________________________________________________


Linksys is probably a neighbors wifi.
When trying to connect to yours, you must enter the passphrase verbatim, case sensitive.
 


_______________________________________________________________________

logged into router on wired pc. at 10.1.1.3

access code is definitely lower case [ as written down by Adam].

There are a couple of other parameters 
"Authentication Method" = WPA2-Personal

"WPA Encryption" = AES

"WPA Pre shared key" = [adam's lower case key]

"WEP Encryption" = none

"Key Index" = 2

"WEP Key 1" = [blank]

ditto 2,3,4 all blank 

"ASUS Passphrase" = [blank]

****

Maybe we have misread one of these keys.

On the laptop i did try to set [windows xp] 
TCP/IP values 10.1.1.3

& dns as 10.1.1.1 [ dsl broadband modem]

Can I Add a Wireless Printer

I currently have my wireless laptop using the networked wireless printer connected to my desktop computer via USB. The desktop shows active wired and a wireless connections on my router's homepage. Question is can I add the printer to the wireless network used by the wireless desktop and disconnect USB. Reason is I want to move the printer to a location where using a USB cable isn't practical.

Hope what I'm asking makes some sense. Running W7 Ultimate.
 

__________________________________________________________

If you have a wireless router and the printer also has a built in wireless print server, then yes, you can omit the USB connection. However, you will need to re-setup the printer on each computer.

Best to uninstall the printer from each computer first, then setup the printer's wifi so it connects to your wifi router, then install the printer on each comp.

Installing a printer that connects via the router is different for different operating systems. The printer likely came with a CD that will guide you through setting it up via the network.
 

What version of XP, Pro or Home?

Anyway, you'll need to setup File & Print Sharing using passwordsn and you'll have to use Computer Management to Add each user to both computers, then configure individual shares on both.

Read this comprehensive Microsoft DOC:


File and Printer Sharing with Microsoft Windows

networking XP-2K

2 PC (XP and 2K) connected thru LAN. XP is having one more wireless for internet. I could ping from both the PC, both are in same workgroup, no firewall. But when i search for the workgroup computer from network places, it can not find any computer. It used to work earlier. 

The networking icon do not appear as blue in 2K . It appears blue only when i ping.
It can not receive packet when idle, but it receivs packets when pinging from other computer.