g}y=o oneTestResultBOX DRIVERNAME,VERSIONDAT,SUPPORTED,INSTALLPRO,WIZPATH pDBfields System Arial arial Arial arial Symbol detailedResults Arial System uaTestResults arial Arial New Roman System System Arial Arial : ++> Arial Courier Arial Arial Z2/?G;+ Z2/?[ Arial arial System Sans Serif stResultsBOX resultsNotSavedINIT Arial STATIC testPerformed,S292, STATIC mpcSpec,S293, STATIC testResult,S294, BUTTON ok,B295,FALSE ,S296,Please Note: Test results are approximate. BUTTON tips,B297,TRUE oneTestResultINIT ,S284,Device Name: ,S290,BIOS Information: STATIC testPerformed,S292, STATIC mpcSpec,S293, BUTTON ok,B295,FALSE :9O3 Arial aphicsBiosInfoBOX B295,FALSE ,S296,Please Note: Test results are approximate. BUTTON tips,B297,TRUE AUR2,AuraVision Aura 2 AURA,AuraVision Aura 1 YUYV,Canopus YUYV RT21,Intel Indeo 2.1 YUV9,Intel YUV9 IV31,Intel Indeo 3 IV32,Intel Indeo 3 FVF1,Iterated Systems ZPEG,Video Zipper MSVC,Microsoft Video 1 CRAM,Microsoft Video 1 MRLE,Run Length Encoding CVID,Cinepak VLV1,Videologic VLCAP.DRV V655,Vitec 16 bit YUV 4:2:2 V422,Vitec 24 bit Yuv 4:2:2 (CCIR 601) YUV8,Winnov CAVIAR YUV8 CHAM,Winnov CAVIARA CHAMPAGNE pVFWcodes oting Tips,0 MS Sans Serif MS Sans Serif DRIVERNAME,VERSIONDAT,SUPPORTED,INSTALLPRO,WIZPATH rif,,30,9,216,45,5,1342177281,130,The MPC Wizard,0,,8,56,267,132,6,1342177280,130,Michael Samett: Programming,0,,114,196,51,15,7,1342242816,128,OK,0 ON 4,B2,TRUE 242816,128,&Print,0,4,157,69,69,15,11,1342242816,128,&Cancel,0 resultsNotSavedBOX 524480,5,40,40,237,104,,,Dialog,8,MS Sans Serif,stuff,42,25,106,48,7,1342177280,130,Text,0,1,156,9,70,15,8,1342242817,128,&Exit Now,0,2,157,29,69,15,9,1342242816,128,&Save to Text File,0,3,157,49,69,15,10,1342242816,128,&Print,0,4,157,69,69,15,2,1342242816,128,&Cancel,0 9,69,15,2,1342242816,128,&Cancel,0 stsNotSavedBOX STATIC stuff,S7,The latest test results have not been printed or saved to disk, and will be lost when you exit. Do you want to save or print them now? BUTTON 1,B8,TRUE BUTTON 2,B9,TRUE BUTTON 3,B10,TRUE BUTTON 4,B2,TRUE : File,0,three,157,49,69,15,10,1342242816,128,&Print,0,four,157,69,69,15,2,1342242816,128,&Cancel,0 nkINIT board,0 ,S284,Test Performed: ,S290,MPC Spec: ,S291,Test Results: STATIC testPerformed,S292, STATIC mpcSpec,S293, STATIC testResult,S294, BUTTON ok,B295,FALSE STATIC infoText,S296, DRIVERNAME,VERSIONDAT,SUPPORTED,INSTALLPRO,WIZPATH rif,,30,9,216,45,5,1342177281,130,The MPC Wizard,0,,8,56,267,149,6,1342177280,130,Michael Samett: Programming,0,,114,210,51,15,7,1342242816,128,OK,0 30,Text,0 DRIVERNAME,VERSIONDAT,SUPPORTED,INSTALLPRO,WIZPATH rif,,30,9,216,45,5,1342177281,130,The MPC Wizard,0,,8,56,267,132,6,1342177280,130,Michael Samett: Programming,0,,114,196,51,15,7,1342242816,128,OK,0 aboutBoxBOX aboutBoxINIT 342177280,130,Text,0,testResult,84,93,146,25,294,1342177280,130,Text,0,ok,92,182,63,14,295,1342242817,128,&OK,0,infoText,4,123,227,52,296,1342177281,130,Text,0 524480,8,57,32,237,220,,,Test Results,8,MS Sans Serif,,4,12,71,12,284,1342177282,130,Text,0,,10,40,65,12,290,1342177282,130,Text,0,,9,92,66,12,291,1342177282,130,Text,0,testPerformed,84,12,146,25,292,1342177280,130,Text,0,mpcSpec,84,40,146,47,293,1342177280,130,Text,0,testResult,84,93,146,25,294,1342177280,130,Text,0,ok,92,182,63,14,295,1342242817,128,&OK,0,infoText,4,123,227,52,296,1342177281,130,Text,0 524480,3,35,20,281,245,,,About the MPC Wizard,8,MS Sans Serif,,30,9,216,45,5,1342177281,130,The MPC Wizard,0,,8,56,267,132,6,1342177280,130,Michael Samett: Programming,0,,114,196,51,15,7,1342242816,128,OK,0 ,S6,Michael Samett: Producer, Designer, Programmer, Writer, Editor Steve Whalen: Writer, Editor, Alpha-Test Coordinator && Programmer, Designer Jeff Kymer: Programmer (low-level tests && Windows hacks), Driver King Ridgely Curry and Associates, Brian Speight: Artwork && Screen Design Todd Whitney: Driver Emperor, This && that Dylan Haggerty: Voice Chris Kitze: Program Concept and Design Diane Heppting: Program Concept and Design Vance Gloster: Programmer, MIDI music Jamie Brehm, Kevin Mannis: Audio Joe Gershen, Richard Bryant: Audio Gary Wagner: Sound Mixing Steve Kaplan: Movie editing Sandra Mueller, Eric Simonson: Design and Production Help Carrie Kitze (EMK Group): Packaging NASA: Movie Clips ,B7,FALSE 524480,3,38,17,281,245,,,About the MPC Wizard,8,MS Sans Serif,,30,9,216,45,5,1342177281,130,The MPC Wizard,0,,8,56,267,149,6,1342177280,130,Michael Samett: Programming,0,,114,210,51,15,7,1342242816,128,OK,0 ,S6,Michael Samett: Producer, Designer, Programmer, Writer, Editor Steve Whalen: Writer, Editor, Alpha-Test Coordinator && Programmer, Designer Jeff Kymer: Programmer (low-level tests && Windows hacks), Driver King Ridgely Curry and Associates, Brian Speight: Artwork && Screen Design Todd Whitney: Driver Emperor, This && that Dylan Haggerty: Voice Chris Kitze: Program Concept and Design Diane Heppting: Program Concept and Design Vance Gloster: Programmer, MIDI music Jamie Brehm, Kevin Mannis: Audio Joe Gershen, Richard Bryant: Audio Sean Smith: Beta-Testing Gary Wagner: Sound Mixing Steve Kaplan: Movie editing Sandra Mueller, Eric Simonson: Design and Production Help Carrie Kitze (EMK Group): Packaging NASA: Movie Clips ,B7,FALSE ,S5,The MPC Wizard, ver. 3.0 Copyright (p) 1992-94 Aris Multimedia Entertainment, Inc. Portions Copyright (p) 1991 Jamie Brehm and Kevin Mannis, (p) 1993 Joe Gershen and Richard Bryant. All rights reserved. ,S6,Michael Samett: Producer, Designer, Programmer, Writer, Editor Steve Whalen: Writer, Editor, Alpha-Test Coordinator && Programmer, Designer Jeff Kymer: Programmer (low-level tests && Windows hacks), Driver King Ridgely Curry and Associates, Brian Speight: Artwork && Screen Design Todd Whitney: Driver Emperor, This && that Dylan Haggerty: Voice Chris Kitze: Program Concept and Design Diane Heppting: Program Concept and Design Vance Gloster: Programmer, MIDI music Jamie Brehm, Kevin Mannis: Audio Joe Gershen, Richard Bryant: Audio Sean Smith: Beta-Testing Gary Wagner: Sound Mixing Steve Kaplan: Movie editing Sandra Mueller, Eric Simonson: Design and Production Help Carrie Kitze (EMK Group): Packaging NASA: Movie Clips ,B7,FALSE Page id 28 false Test Results List Page id 28 uRetValue SoftKey International's MPC Wizard cancel Page id 28 Page" Page id 29 Page" scrollingTextViewer Page id 30 386SX cancel cancel The MPC Wizard uRetValue Page id 31 Page id 32 genericMsgViewer Page id 34 genericViewer1 Test Results List st Results List ockScreen st Results Help st Results Help ormation Page id 36 Properties slgFlashing enterWindow false slgFlashing leaveWindow Window 4logical slgFlashing leaveWindow loFocus enterWindow Window -- This gets around a probable ToolBook bug that doesn't loFocus = loFocus enterWindow Window -- This gets around a probable ToolBook bug that doesn't loFocus = Find a CD-ROM Driver CD Audio Tests MIDI Audio Tips chooseSpecs MIDI Audio Tests Sound Tests Video for Windows Tips graphics tips Video for Windows Tests graphics tests Find a Sound Driver InstallGraphics genericMsg Find a Graphics Driver testResults Test Results showMotion allTestsMessage detailedResults vfwStats copy16s44msg wizardStatusBar Find a Driver soundInfo Multimedia Applications graphicsBiosInfo testResultsHelp What's an MPC? resultsNotSaved Wave Audio Tips InstallCDROM Wave Audio Tests motionVideoTests CD-ROM Tips Motion Video Tests speakerTest MPEG Video Tips CD-ROM Drive Tips firstPage CD-ROM Drive Tests MPCtests mpegTips MPEG Video Tests MPC Tests CDaudioTips CD Audio Tips showMotion g_cdTest g_graphicsTest g_soundTest g_motionTest g_AllTests g_cdromTests g_soundTests g_graphicsTests Test Results Title WhatsAnMPC MPC Tests Find a Driver Test Results Multimedia Apps passed failed noMpcSpec testNotRun Find a Driver Title What's an MPC? Title Multimedia Applications Title MPC Tests Title littleSound littleGraphics littleCD littleMotionVideo testBase "iioM!o!!!!!***** i"ipoiiM!!!!!!***h ""iioMMiM!!!!!!*** p""iiMMo!!!!!!!**** pii""ioiMo!!!!!!!***h* "pi""i"iMoM!!!!!!****h "ip"M"iioM!!!!!!!**** pM"iMoM!!M!!!!!!!* p"i"i"iioMooo!!!!****** i""iMMov{{!!!!!**h* "pipp"ioo{|{!!!!!**** #p"""vv""{{|{!!!!!**!** """"v{| |{o!!!!!*** p""v|{{ovo!!!!!* ##vv|||""p""p{ {{!!!!!! |{M!!!!! ||"p""| {oMio!! ##v|| ||#""| ||iiMoiM """MMMi |vvvip!M |||""""i |||#p ||$|v## )))()( yyWTq )))))&( p$&'()))) )))&' ))))) ))))) ('()) Hp%&))))) )(('( #*!!# ))&()))$ ()()%! &'()( o%$%(() **#&%'(((# &&&&&'&&&'&&'&''''' '#hhhhh &&&'&&'' &&&&&& %$""! %%$"o!* EECCBB MMMMM*M %!!%& EECCCBB MMMMM**M*M '$*o% %EEEECCC MMMMMMM! h%'#!# FFEEECC MMMMMMMM*M o&&"o$% FFFEEEC MMMMMMMM*!*M*M #&%"o%%%F FFFEEE TMMMMMMMMM!* $'$""%%%F FFFFE TTTTMMMMMMMM*** !%&$"#%% TTMMTMMMMMMMMM*M TTTTMMMMMMMMM!** TTTTMTMMTMMMMM!M*#&%# TTTTTTMMMMMMMMM**$& TTTTTTTTMMMMMMMMo%&$ TTTTTTTTTTMMMMMMo% %%%$%%#! 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MM+M + MMMMM !'$o%% TMMM+MM TMMMM+MM+ TMMMMMM+M $ TTTMMMM+M + TTTMMMMMMo %%%$o TMTMM!#& TTTTMM# &&&&&&& '&&&&&&& &&&&' vvpTOOO '&&&& &&&'' NpvvvOrq%' &&&vpvvv o+!o+!|& OOONNO-+o&( OOvvOO-+" +!NOOOTN v-MOOOTTO }M+-!-OVOTOOw& povwwOOOT wOwOO &&&&&& &&&&&& '&&&&&&& &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& poiiio!i!! + p"p"oiioi!!!+ > ppp"o"io!i!!!+ ppppppoi"o!!!!++++ pppppp"poiioooo ! ppppppppooou|o+!+ pppppp"poou |o!+! vppp#""#u||uoo!! |p#v|||"""pu|u!!! ||||| ||vppp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwp 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%%%$$#"#o"'( i>>i>i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii |o!! o iii#' #ii!i i>i>i>i>i>i>iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiio "!i o% !iiiiiiiiiiiii>i>!i !ooo 5>"&')'> clock cdromDrive waveAudio midiAudio cdAudio placeHolder check b^#V#V# pppppp wwpwwp xxpxxp xxpxx ~TS>|> pppppp wwpwwp xxpxxp xxpxx wwwwwwwww ppppppp ppppppp ppppppp ppppppp ppppppp ppppppp ppppppp ppppppp ppppppp 33333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333330 3333330 333333 33333 33333 wwwwwwwwwp wwwwwwwwwwp fffffff fffffff fffffff fffffff s" = ,!J#" vInst vMenuList !MpopMenu will remain the chosen key. Error changing percussion instruments. Unable to change MIDI key. itemNumFromText Sound: :pKeyMenuList pKeyAssignments vKeys vKeyAss svKeyNum buttonClick ,%H.% itemNumFromText .&+ +E -#, #> .&+ +E w, #> w, #> .&+ +E freeWinPointer $bgetWinPointer soundInfo An unknown error occurred. genericViewer1 loGenViewer Sound Device Driver Information deviceName Your wave audio device is not responding. No wave audio tests can be performed. lpStruct waveOutGetDevCaps troubleMsg Your wave audio device driver is not responding. versionNum buttonClick .&+ +E .&+ +E MsetAllButtonColors false W@buttonChosen .&+ +E .&+ +E MPC 1 MsetAllButtonColors MPC 2 xbuttonDown .&+ +E ,%H.% .&+ +E false llCnt1 changeButton MsetAllButtonColors ybuttonDown changeButton .&+ +E .&+ +E caching of CD-ROM drives. H[warningMsgBox runCDtest of SmartDrive. Versions below 5.0 do not allow for the enabled at the time SmartDrive was loaded on your system. svCDdrive because that feature was not H&testNotRunCleanUp because you are running version CD-ROM drive See your operating system manual to learn how to isSmartDriveCachingCD getSmartDriveVer enable it. because SmartDrive is not loaded on your system. load it. You can't run this test with SmartDrive caching reRunTest -#, #> w, #> w, #> freeWinPointer $bgetWinPointer Wave audio may not play. An error of unknown origin occurred. Your wave audio device is not responding. lpStruct waveOutGetDevCaps report2 H[warningMsgBox troubleMsg Your wave audio device driver is not responding. [no information available] report1 enterPage .&+ +E 1, #b report stereo Click TROUBLESHOOTING svCDdrive getCDdevice vPlayerName TIPS for further information after clicking OK. H[warningMsgBox enterPage report freeWinPointer $bgetWinPointer The MCI CD audio driver is not installed for drive [none] is no longer valid. vCDletter sysinfo cdaudio quantity GnoneInstalled (GetPrivateProfileString system.ini sysinfo CDaudio name svCDdrive Drive vNumWords vPlayerName vNumMCIcds vCDnum vCDdrives , or not installed correctly. 0wgetCDDriveList Zilch No CD audio devices are installed. vEntry getCDdevice 1, #b report svCDdrive [not installed] noneInstalled MPC 1 enterPage sTestRunning leavePage There are no test results because you haven't run testScreen :showDetailedResult sTestRunning 240,50,20 #\runTest this test yet. Would you like to run it now? buttonClick .&+ +E .&+ +E testScreen sTestRunning mouseEnter .&+ +E sTestRunning mouseLeave testResultsHelp keyDown .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E lTestPageName &Cancel testScreen Troubleshooting Tips &Run Test &Go to sTestRunning Screen :showDetailedResult !MpopMenu 240,50,20 sTestJumpPage #\runTest &View Test Results &Re-Run Test Go &to rightButtonDown .&+ +E reRunTest sTestRunning wizardStatusBar Test in progress. runTest 7showOneTestResult saTestResults showDetailedResult saTestResults getButtonSpecNum setAllButtonColors .&+ +E .&+ +E reRunTest Test Results Now running all false checkForEsc Testing is complete. All tests were run. runAllTests clearAllResults Re-Run &All Tests wizardStatusBar Testing is complete. The following tests could not be run: slgTestRan tests. saTestResults uaTestGroupList }gyieldApp runAllTestsReally .&+ +E ,!J " ,!J " .&+ +E 1, #? .&+ +E svBookPath ?WinExec Put the MPC Wizard 3 CD in CD-ROM drive svCDdrive The SoftKey Product Catalog can't be found. catalog2.exe try running the SoftKey Product Catalog again. H[warningMsgBox watchForMsg buttonClick showWizard RegisterWindowMessage sCatalogMsgNum CAT_EXITING watchForMsg showWizard sCatalogMsgNum showWizard .&+ +E .&+ +E svBookEntered sFlashCount rpdisplaybitsperpixel 60,50,100 ZstartUp textAndButtons sskFlashingBoxFillColor enterPage TbmakeStatusBarNormal sShowStatusBarMsg sFlashCount wizardStatusBar sFlashStatusBar sskFlashingBoxFillColor title leavePage To learn about a feature, just move your mouse over it. Information about that feature will appear here. pstatusBarText false wizardStatusBar sFlashStatusBar mouseEnter TbmakeStatusBarNormal false sFlashStatusBar mouseLeave wizardStatusBar W@makeStatusBarNormal slgFlashing To learn about a feature, just move your mouse over it. Information about that feature will appear here. false lsDefaultText sShowStatusBarMsg sFlashCount wizardStatusBar minimized sFlashStatusBar sskFlashingBoxFillColor closeGenMsgViewer stwoDquicksort mainText checkWinVersion clearAllResults exuaTestResults rpdisplaybitsperpixel getDefaultPaths startDLLs saTestResults startUp YieldApp horizontalDisplayRes verticalDisplayRes displayBitsPerPixel popMenu displayColorPlanes getWinIniVar sendKeys getIniVar setIniVar -SetErrorMode getDriveType SetErrorMode ,#Tt3 5-# GetPrivateProfileString GetTempDrive GetTempFileName GetVersion WinExec GlobalAlloc GlobalFree GlobalHandle GlobalLock GlobalUnlock mmsystem.dll cdtest.dll openDBFile findDBkey setDBNavigateToDeleted openDBIndexFile getDBFieldValue getDBErrorString closeAllDBfiles getDBRecordCount getDBFieldValue nextDBKey firstDBKey getDBFieldWidth TB30DB3.DLL RegisterWindowMessage PeekMessage ,#Te, j-" MessageBeep ,#Tt. I-" MessageBox ,#Tr he-" RedrawWindow ,#TrMsg-" TB30WIN.DLL noMME TestRawThrough TestMPCThrough TestMPCThrough2 ReadDiscStartEnd TestThirdSeek EnableSmartDrive SmartDriveStats SmartDriveCache getDriveList getCurrentDrive fileExists getCurrentDirectory removeFile copyFile getFreeDiskSpace getFileSize isCDDrive getCDDriveList TB30DOS.DLL kernel TB30WIN.DLL mscdexVer textToClipboard getLoWord getLoByte getHiByte sndPlaySound waveOutGetDevCaps midiOutGetDevCaps midiOutCacheDrumPatches midiOutShortMsg midiOutOpen midiOutClose TB30DLG.DLL wiz.dll saveAsDlg openFileDlg dialog setValue getValue McheckDLL startDLLs closeGenMsgViewer get this message, you may be running low on memory. To remedy this situation, try turning on Virtual Memory (see the Windows If you're sure that the file is where it should be, and you still Make sure it is either on the hard disk directory where this program resides, or in any directory on the DOS path. Control Panel Help or your Windows manual for directions). Can't link to file " checkDLL closeGenMsgViewer "The MPC Wizard" can't run without them. installed properly. The Multimedia Extensions to Windows are not installed, or not noMME .&, " .&, " .&, " ,%H.% .&+ +E svBookPath )getDriveList -SetErrorMode fileExists /getDriveType svCDdrive Retry :\wiz3_cd.tbk svDefaultTargetPath closeGenMsgViewer dpathErrorMsgs getDefaultPaths &~showLoadingMsg isCDDrive svTextFile vDriveList getBookPath vDrive setDefaultTargetPath getDefaultPaths w, #> closeGenMsgViewer getLoByte getLoWord You may experience problems. GetVersion sWinVersion You are running in Windows program was designed to be run in Windows 3.1. getHiByte You may experience problems if you decide to continue. What do you want to do? &~showLoadingMsg @vLoWord , but this Continue checkWinVersion Retry CD is not in your CD-ROM drive. Put the CD into your drive and click "Retry," or click "Exit" vBook to leave this program. pathErrorMsgs vgetCurrentDirectory getCurrentDrive svCDdrive setDefaultTargetPath P7H&(8 bV|2c$b s@e|C o}T[p. enterSystem troubleshootingTips goBack testmisc\cdtest.fil textAndButtons svTextFile title enterbook s_mmdevices tbkmmdevices .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E cancel &Cancel false Set up the printer first, or print right now? print wdlgBoxGetValue Print Now ]quitNow saveResults &Print Now 1LprintResults sResultsNotSaved Set Up... resultsNotSaved 06cleanUp &Set Up... leaveBook cancel false sResultsNotSaved Do you want to exit now? quitNow .&+ +E .&+ +E lRetValue messageBeep genericViewer1 The MPC Wizard uRetValue resultsNotSaved uRetValue resultsNotSaved .&+ +E .&+ +E Find a button sTestRunning wizardStatusBar pushButton buttonClick + , #? .&+ +E This program has tried and failed to removeFile delete the temporary file -SetErrorMode close waveFile fileExists ssTempWavefile close aniFile H[warningMsgBox close MIDIFile Try deleting it yourself after exiting. close CDFile cleanUp .&+ +E previous author reader enterWindow first history getBookPath button 7showAboutBox keyDown mainText firstPage false lastPage nextPage previousPage textToClipboard scrollMainText scrollText ,%H.% }clearResultsRecField no driver selected vDriverPages WIZPATH installGraphics,installSound,installCDROM DRIVERNAME setDefaultSettings deviceInfo BdeQuote padding .&+ +E .&+ +E MPC 1 requirements wizPath Test Results stereo MIDI Audio Tests [no driver selected] minimize waveRadioButtons report3 Wave Audio Tests detailedResults runAllTests Sound: Acoustic Bass Drum patches Video for Windows Tests YpLastPatchNum clearAllResults Graphics Tests pLastKeyNum Find a Graphics Driver CD-ROM Drive Tests Run &All Tests report mpc 1 wizardStatusBar report2 lOriginalPage withSmartDrive Sound: Acoustic Grand Piano Find a Sound Driver Find a CD-ROM Driver Multimedia Applications chooseSpecs speakerTest lFindPages CD Audio Tests report1 selectDriver resetWizard retValue aboutBoxBOX K,aboutBoxInit dialog showAboutBox -SetErrorMode false vidfind.dll NameVideoCompressor lSysError linkVidFind -SetErrorMode false TestDib8 TestDib8Percent SetPath SetWindowName SetTimesToPlay SetReRealize blttest.dll lSysError linkBlttest , which is needed Can't link to file to run this test. sure you have installed Video for Windows 1.1 correctly, If you're H[warningMsgBox If you're sure that the file is where it should be, and you still Make sure it is either on the hard disk directory where this program resides, or in any directory on the DOS path. \VFWSETUP directory of the MPC Wizard CD. Control Panel Help or your Windows manual for directions). runtime files on your hard disk. To do so, run SETUP.EXE from the get this message, you may not have installed the Video for Windows 1.1 you may be running low on memory. To remedy this situation, try turning on Virtual Memory (see the Windows noVFWdll .&+ +E .&+ +E w, #> .&+ +E w, #> Testing your speaker channels. waveAudio close wavefile wait BpreventScreenSaver play wavefile wait set wavefile time format tmsf wait set wavefile audio all off wait alias wavefile wait h&canPlaySound 0showTestMsgViewer on wait Press Esc to stop test. You should be break wavefile on 27 lError set wavefile audio H[warningMsgBox hearing something! failedSpeakerMsg JcloseTestMsgViewer runSpeakerTest For possible causes, click the Troubleshooting Tips button at the bottom right of your screen after quitting the Speaker Test box. failedSpeakerMsg driver is not installed correctly on your checkDevCaps sWinVersion system. You are missing the line " An error of unknown origin occurred. audio device driver is not responding. checkCueing checkInis mid=sequencer The MCI driver is not installed on your " in the "[mci extensions]" section of your WIN.INI file. audio device is not responding. wav=waveaudio canPlaySound .&+ +E .&+ +E cue soundFile wait alias soundFile wait close soundFile wait 6sndPlaySound close soundFile checkCueing freeWinPointer $bgetWinPointer midiOutGetDevCaps waveOutGetDevCaps checkDevCaps .&+ h .&+ h .&+ h .&+ h system.ini mci extensions waveAudio sequencer mciwave.drv getIniVar mciseq.drv *getWinIniVar checkInis .&+ +E oneTestResultBOX static infoText vsetValue retValue static testPerformed +oneTestResultInit static testResult static mpcSpec saTestResults dialog showOneTestResult .&+%? +%,!E +%,!Y svResultsDirty sResultsNotSaved saTestResults llCnt1 recordTestResult !setOneButtonColor setOneColor setResultsButtonColor mcompareMpcSpec saTestResults setOneColor waveAudio screenResolution false 3strokeAccess played compareMpcSpec Test Results saTestResults getButtonSpecNum setOneButtonColor MPC 1 requirements Test Results getButtonSpecNum Test Results sTestRunning slgTestRan saTestResults testNotRunCleanUp breakupLines svResultsDirty false formatTextLine saTestResults detailedResults writeTestResults 1, #> 1, #> 1, #> w, #> w, #> w, #> vCol2 'padding vCol1 break1Field vCol3 ,L,3," breakupLines BdeQuote break1Field -$, #> w, #> w, #> 1, "j 1, #> w, #> you must specify a number. Itemcount is: When using decimal tabbing, sizeditem leadingspaces trailingspaces 'padding decloc All decimal-aligned values must contain a decimal. BdeQuote Wrong number of items for this handler. Example: D5 formatTextLine deQuote .&+ +E 1, #b .&+ +E .&+ +E closeGenMsgViewer Save Test Results vTargetFile 17,19,10 svResultsDirty false writeTestResults wizard.txt clock saveReport There are no test results to save. showGenMsgViewer l:getPath svDefaultTargetPath Please wait... Text Files,*.txt,All Files,*.* saveAsDlg Getting Test Results. saveResults .&+ +E closeGenMsgViewer detailedResults false clock showGenMsgViewer and can't be copied over. No file has been saved. Please wait... sResultsNotSaved Saving Test Results. b~getHeader H[warningMsgBox is a Read-Only file, MPC Wizard saveReport getHeader ,%H.% svResultsDirty Test Results llCnt2 sResultsNotSaved saTestResults detailedResults clearAllResults closeGenMsgViewer 17,19,10 svResultsDirty false writeTestResults There are no test results to print. clock showGenMsgViewer Please wait... sResultsNotSaved sfDetailedResults detailedResults Getting Test Results. printResults clock wiz3_cd.tbk showGenMsgViewer Please wait... Loading information from the CD. showLoadingMsg wizardStatusBar testInProgessMsg loGenMsgViewer after current test concludes. Test Results false genericMsgText genericMsgViewer testingWindow Esc wizardStatusBar genericMsgIcon Test in progress. Pressing Esc will abort testing showTestMsgViewer loGenMsgViewer genericMsgText genericMsgViewer genericMsgIcon showGenMsgViewer genericMsgViewer closeGenMsgViewer Test Results genericMsgViewer testingWindow closeTestMsgViewer MessageBox messageBeep The MPC Wizard warningMsgBox Unable to allocate global memory. Quit one H[warningMsgBox or more concurrently running programs, and try again. noMemMsg .&+ +E .&+ +E cancel lRetValue genericViewer1 The MPC Wizard uRetValue uRetValue dlgBoxGetValue After clicking OK, see if further information is available by clicking the Troubleshooting Tips button at the bottom right Test Results of your screen. failedTroubleMsg of your screen after clicking OK. Test Results If you experienced any problems, click the Troubleshooting Tips button at the bottom right passedTroubleMsg Test results are approximate. resultsApproxMsg w, #> resultsApproxMsg passedTroubleMsg passedTroubleAndApproxMsg GlobalAlloc GlobalLock getWinPointer GlobalUnlock GlobalFree GlobalHandle freeWinPointer stbk_noSwap |CtwoDquicksrt twoDquicksort stbk_noSwap |CtwoDquicksrt twoDquicksrt .&, " topline topLine AngledLine wiz3DeeRect inOut threeDStyle bottomLine reAlign3dObject .&, " .&, " GlobalUnlock GlobalAlloc GlobalFree GlobalLock PeekMessage checkForEsc allowScreenSaver noScreenSaver preventScreenSaver }TnoScreenSaver noScreenSaver 0RedrawWindow forceRedraw Pyo*R d-ougF<,h_S=j pstatusBarText Information about that feature will appear here. wizardStatusBar To learn about a feature, just move your mouse over it. mouseEnter Information about that feature will appear here. false wizardStatusBar sFlashStatusBar To learn about a feature, just move your mouse over it. mouseLeave CmsetupMainText troubleshootingTips Title goBack showTipsButton scrollAmt mainTextBounds Find a Driver showGoBackButton initDriverDB KvuSection textAndButtons UparentSection title enterPage find a uninitDriverDB leavePage getPath mainText Test Results fCtrl false troubleshootingTips fShift scrollMainText testResultsHelp keyDown .&, " setResultsButtonColor of your Windows graphics driver. C7displayColorPlanes less than 256 7showOneTestResult 32,768 or 65,536 Unable to determine the color depth H&testNotRunCleanUp testInProgessMsg recordTestResult screenColorDepth rpdisplaybitsperpixel vResult H[warningMsgBox passedTroubleMsg colors lFormattedNum runColorTest of your Windows graphics driver. 7showOneTestResult screenResolution 9verticalDisplayRes H&testNotRunCleanUp pixels testInProgessMsg recordTestResult H[warningMsgBox passedTroubleMsg horizontalDisplayRes setResultsButtonColor Unable to determine the resolution runResolutionTest .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E (8 Bit , 40% of CPU Time) JcloseTestMsgViewer Test Results linkBlttest BpreventScreenSaver false clock BLTTEST.DLL 04Bit 8oprocessResult H&testNotRunCleanUp DSetPath (4 Bit testInProgessMsg svCDdrive Testing your bitmap display speed. TESTGRAF\04BITBMP\ 08Bit allowScreenSaver wnoVFWdll 01Bit callBlitDllFunctions TESTGRAF\01BITBMP\ TESTGRAF\08BITBMP\ (1 Bit 0showTestMsgViewer , 100% of CPU Time) runDrawDibTest Testing Bitmap Display Speed ZSetWindowName }gyieldApp lResult HTestDib8 TestDib8Percent SetTimesToPlay callBlitDllFunctions .&+ +E setResultsButtonColor resultsApproxMsg 7showOneTestResult Unable to perform Bitmap Display Speed Test. llArrayElement H&testNotRunCleanUp k pixels/ sec. recordTestResult H[warningMsgBox V|passedTroubleAndApproxMsg getBlitErrorMsgs processResult test cannot continue. Unable to perform Bitmap Display Speed Test. The test bitmaps vary in size. This test cannot continue. Too many applications may be running. This test Error reading a test bitmap file. The file may not try again. exist, or may be corrupted. This test cannot continue. Video for Windows 1.1 or higher is not installed. This test cannot continue. Window could not be created. This cannot continue. Restart Windows and Error registering the window class. getBlitErrorMsgs .&+ +E genericViewer1 fairWarning loGenViewer deviceName GetVideoData GetVideoBIOS ,BT Win-" wizardStatusBar getGraphicsDeviceName Graphics Device BIOS Information NgetGraphicsBiosInfo checkVxdDLL otherBiosInfo wizvxd.dll graphicsBiosInfo showGraphicsBiosInfo Cancel Trying to get information from your graphics device BIOS can Continue IMPORTANT! false cause system problems if that BIOS, or your graphics driver, is your computer. What do you want to do? problems (lockups, color changes, etc.), exit Windows and re-boot improperly written. If you continue and afterwards experience fairWarning freeWinPointer $bgetWinPointer GetVideoData [no information available] getGraphicsDeviceName freeWinPointer $bgetWinPointer [unable to obtain other BIOS information] GetVideoBIOS getGraphicsBiosInfo Can't Perform Task situation, try turning on Virtual Memory (see the Windows false lsMsg H[warningMsgBox Make sure WIZVXD.DLL is either on the hard disk directory where this If you're sure that the file is where it should be, and you still get this message, you may be running low on memory. To remedy this program resides, or in any directory on the DOS path. Can't link to file WIZVXD.DLL. Control Panel Help or your Windows manual for directions). The task you requested can't be performed. checkVxdDLL .&+ +E V, #> .&+ +E setResultsButtonColor [unknown] mscdexVer 7showOneTestResult testInProgessMsg recordTestResult MSCDEXversion passedTroubleMsg Pre-2.0 runMscdexTest .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E setResultsButtonColor A problem occurred. drive, 7showOneTestResult false callTestDll EnableSmartDrive CssendKeys resultsApproxMsg H&testNotRunCleanUp {keyEscape} 5 testInProgessMsg svCDdrive 3strokeAccess Put the MPC Wizard CD in your kb/sec. vResult tranRate40WithSD recordTestResult forceReDraw H[warningMsgBox and try this test again. Couldn't get result. readCDfile lFormattedResult runCDtest .&, " svCDdrive vFile svTextFile readCDfile 1, "L .&+ +E vEndPtr $bgetWinPointer JcloseTestMsgViewer tranRate40 Test Results TestMPCThrough BpreventScreenSaver }gYieldApp TestRawThrough Testing your CD-ROM Drive. freeWinPointer ReadDiscStartEnd checkForEsc clock svCDdrive EnableProgressWin allowScreenSaver vStart 3strokeAccess tranRate60 vResult TestMPCThrough2 lXTestThirdSeek SetTestParameters tranRate100 0showTestMsgViewer Your mouse pointer is hidden for the duration of the test. vStartPtr vDriveNum callTestDll 1, #b SmartDriveCache false svCDDrive getSmartDriveVer @b00000000 isSmartDriveCachingCD V, #> freeWinPointer $bgetWinPointer SmartDriveStats getSmartDriveVer .&+ +E V, #? w, #> .&+ +E .&+ +E setResultsButtonColor Testing your CD Audio. vTestResult You should be Played set CDFile audio all off wait vError stereo BpreventScreenSaver right Didn't Play CssendKeys llArrayElement alias CDfile shareable wait {keyEscape} 5 cdAudio recordTestResult 0showTestMsgViewer stop CDfile wait on wait set CDfile time format tmsf wait Press Esc to stop test. wasCDescPressed failedTroubleMsg allowScreenSaver passedTroubleMsg hearing something! JcloseTestMsgViewer 7showOneTestResult lTrackRange break CDfile on 27 close CDFile set CDFile audio play CDfile from runCDaudioTest status CDfile position track status CDfile length track false set CDfile time format milliseconds wait lEndPos status CDfile position wasCDescPressed freeWinPointer $bgetWinPointer The MCI CD audio driver is not installed for drive is no longer valid. vCDletter sysinfo cdaudio quantity (GetPrivateProfileString system.ini sysinfo CDaudio name svCDdrive Drive vNumWords vPlayerName vNumMCIcds vCDnum vCDdrives , or not installed correctly. 0wgetCDDriveList Zilch No CD audio devices are installed. vEntry getCDdevice .&+ +E w, #> .&+ +E .&+ +E cancel failedTroubleMsg Didn't Play waveAudio set waveFile time format milliseconds wait vError close waveFile getWavePath play waveFile wait type waveaudio alias waveFile wait stop waveFile wait 7showOneTestResult CssendKeys break Press Esc to stop test. {keyEscape} 5 h&canPlaySound recordTestResult 3setWaveTimer _SwasEscPressed setResultsButtonColor You should be BpreventScreenSaver break waveFile on 27 allowScreenSaver passedTroubleMsg Testing your wave audio. Played 0showTestMsgViewer JcloseTestMsgViewer noWaveFile hearing something! runWaveAudioTest sa16s44statusTimer single setWaveTimer sa16s44statusTimer sTestRunning runWaveAudioTest waveAudio16s44 timerNotify .&+ +E waveAudio H&testNotRunCleanUp noWaveFile testsnd\ svCDdrive ssTempWavefile get16s44File 16s44 getWavePath getWaveTempFile fileExists ssTempWavefile get16s44File .&+ +E cancel testsnd\16s44.wav query6s44box svCDdrive copyWaveTempFile getWaveTempFile w,##P closeGenMsgViewer cancel testsnd\16s44.wav Can't access file 16S44.WAV. false to store temporary files (located on drive it to the directory that Windows uses $GetTempDrive svCDdrive at least wdlgBoxGetValue Click COPY to copy the file getFileSize 44.25 kHz stereo wave audio test, but run all the others. bytes of free space. What do you want to do? to your hard disk, space permitting. The test file will remain on H[warningMsgBox drive until you exit this session of the MPC Wizard. Playing the 16-bit, 44 kHz stereo wave audio file requires copying ). This means that drive Click SKIP to skip the 16-bit, must have copy16s44msg query6s44box $GetTempDrive freeWinPointer $bgetWinPointer removeFile noDiskSpace clock svCDdrive Unable to run this test. ssTempWavefile getFreeDiskSpace Can't access file 16s44.WAV. Please wait... closeGenMsgViewer testsnd\16s44.wav getFileSize yocantCopy Copying file. GetTempFileName H[warningMsgBox break icopyFile lpBuff showGenMsgViewer copyWaveTempFile closeGenMsgViewer byte test file. drive Unable to run this test. H[warningMsgBox to copy the Sorry, you don't have enough free disk space on noDiskSpace closeGenMsgViewer Unable to run this test. H[warningMsgBox Unable to copy test file to drive cantCopy .&+ +E ,!JR" w, #> .&+ +E getIniVar lsDisableWarning Didn't Play You should be midiAudio Played (percussive) BpreventScreenSaver false bach.mid setIniVar 7showOneTestResult llArrayElement Press Esc to stop test. {keyEscape} 5 failedTroubleMsg h&canPlaySound recordTestResult SYSTEM.INI Testing your MIDI Audio allowScreenSaver passedTroubleMsg mciseq.drv midiAudioMelodic hearing something! (melodic) CssendKeys setResultsButtonColor disablewarning 0showTestMsgViewer playOneMidiSound JcloseTestMsgViewer playMidi Didn't Play AplayPercHiEnd B%MidiOutClose Played checkMidiMsg svPatchNum false bach.mid svPrevPatchCached checkForEsc sendMidiMsg [cacheDrumPatch F .&+ +E w, #> .&+ +E Played Testing Video for Windows playback. Didn't Play JcloseTestMsgViewer type AVIVideo alias aniFile nostatic style child parent :playVFWmovie vError 7showOneTestResult BpreventScreenSaver false _SwasEscPressed Testing clock CssendKeys Test Results H[warningMsgBox {keyEscape} 5 testInProgessMsg sWizSysError where aniFile window wait showMotion allowScreenSaver close aniFile wait getVFWname recordTestResult showStatsWindow Didn't Play Properly lxgetVFWfileInfo }gYieldApp passedTroubleMsg 1.1 or later may not be installed. failedTroubleMsg aniFile setResultsButtonColor Can't link to file "VIDFIND.DLL." Video for Windows testingMotion 0showTestMsgViewer isRightCodecInstalled vMovieSize linkVidFind getVfwStats runVFWTest + , 7 + , 7 + , 7 + ,!Y .&+ +E w, #> The movie played. genericViewer1 The MPC Wizard pixels vfwStats moviePlayed passedTroubleMsg Frames were skipped by Video for Windows. No frames were skipped by Video for Windows. showStatsWindow + ,!" + ,!Y + ,!Y set aniFile time format milliseconds wait status aniFile nominal frame rate status aniFile length status aniFile frames skipped set aniFile time format frames wait status aniFile position status aniFile bitsperpel getVfwStats realize aniFile wait play aniFile wait put aniFile window client at }gYieldApp showTestingMsg stop aniFile wait mainWinMidX calcVFWVertPos break aniFile on 27 wait lError }gyieldApp testingMotion playVFWmovie installed on your system The video portion of this movie didn't play. sWizSysError You probably need to update the Video for Windows runtime status aniFile bitsperpel lError isRightCodecInstalled w, "X freeWinPointer $bgetWinPointer Unknown Method lVFWcaption neNameVideoCompressor pVfwCodes Can't get file type saTestResults getVFWfileInfo testvfw\ svCDdrive vfwIntelIndeo vfwCinepak vfwMsv1 getVFWname testingMotion showMotion showTestingMsg showMotion mainWinMidX testingMotion showMotion calcVFWVertPos .&+ +E -#, #? w, #> .&+ +E w, #> .&+ +E .&+ +E Played CssendKeys Didn't Play JcloseTestMsgViewer realize aniFile window anifile text Test Results 7showOneTestResult BpreventScreenSaver status aniFile window handle vLargePicHandle cmovieErrorMsg clock svCDdrive aniFile _SwasEscPressed testmisc\mpegtest.mpg testInProgessMsg stop aniFile break aniFile on 27 wait mpegVideo Testing your MPEG motion video playback. play aniFile wait close aniFile {keyEscape} 5 alias aniFile style 13565952 parent fullScreen allowScreenSaver passedTroubleMsg recordTestResult vFile setResultsButtonColor 0showTestMsgViewer window anifile state show maximized runMpegTest The necessary hardware and/or software may not be installed, or may not installed correctly. Unable to play this movie. movieErrorMsg .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E cancel continue drive, Test Results false svCDdrive goNow ssTempWavefile allTestsMessage Put the MPC Wizard CD in your \#runAllTestsReally wdlgBoxGetValue H[warningMsgBox get16s44File chooseSpecs and try this test again. readCDfile runAllTests Test Results \#runAllTestsReally goNow .&+ +E + , #> + , #> w, #> .&+ +E closeGenMsgViewer openDBIndexFile getDBFieldWidth svDBKeyWidth false vTotalRecords svCDdrive selectDriver getDBFieldValue LidriverFileName showGenMsgViewer Reading driver information from the MPC Wizard CD. Please wait... firstDBKey setDBNavigateToDeleted lsFileName nextDBKey openDBFile clock w, #> .&+ +E findDBkey wizPath find a svCDdrive svDBKeyWidth 'padding fillDisplayFields = icon "testing" getSmartDriveVer() >= 5.0 -- A CD-cachable version installed. -- See whether SmartDrv cache isSmartDriveCachingCD() runCDtest ( >),1, = "You can't caching" &&\ "CD-ROM " && ) && "because that feature was x" &&\ "enabled !loaded on your 4."&\ operating 4manual learn how " -- Null out the results testNotRunCleanUp "CD- " && ) && " are running . Versions below 5.0 xallow drives." -- "CD- L" && ) && " 4."&\ warningMsgBox placeHolder" 4svWaveEnteredBefore lpStruct = getWinPointer(64) waveOutGetDevCaps(0, 1,64) = 0 -- Cool. pointerSTRING(6, "report1" pointerBYTE(5, ) & "." & "report2" -- LOBYTE & HIBYTE -- Uncool. --MCI reports: "The device ID range." warningMsgBox "Your audio xresponding." &\ troubleMsg() -- pdriver present." "An error unknown origin occurred." &&\ xplay." lockScreen = "[no information available]" = "[no freeWinPointer( 4svCDdrive "report" vPlayerName getCDdevice() r<> "OK" warningMsgBox k& "Click TROUBLESHOOTING"&&\ "TIPS further information clicking OK." B"stereo" lockScreen vNumMCIcds callMCI("sysinfo cdaudio quantity") noneInstalled "No CD Adevices are installed." "No CD vCDletter vCDdrives getCDDriveList() vCDnum (textlineCount( A) - 1) ++ 1) vPtr = getWinPointer(256) getMemPointer(256) vHandle -- Check each drivername CDaudio p" && i) GetPrivateProfileString("mci", ,"Zilch", ,256," 4.ini") vEntry vNumWords isType(" -- Got freeWinPointer( freeMemory -- Return the devicename. "The MCI CD " &&\ correctly." " && )&& " no longer valid." B"MPC 1" 4sTestRunning buttonClick testScreen >= "240,50,20" "There are no C results because you haven't " o yet. Would $like now?" f"Yes" runTest showDetailedResult ( o= 44 = 112 -- F1 key. B"testResultsHelp" = = keyEnter >= "MPC" Rloc,isShift,isCtrl 4 sTestJumpPage lsItemList, lsTips lTestPageName = 1 = "Troubleshooting Y = "&View ","&Go " && `&& " "Go & " && ,"&Re-Run ","&Cancel" >= "240,50,20" = "& popMenu( ,sysMagnification, pTarget flushMessageQueue() "wizardStatusBar" progress." reRunTest pTargetName 4saTestResults[][] \ llCnt1 lsTargetName +][1] showOneTestResult p][4], z][13] setAllButtonColors liButtonSpecNum lockScreen $ = getButtonSpecNum() dimensions( ][1] = runAllTestsReally 4logical slgTestRan, slgDontShowAllTestsMsg , llCnt2, llDim lsWarningMsg Z laTestGroupList[] Zgraphic lgrButton /= "Now running "tests." clearAllResults -- Get the 6 list that does each = uaTestGroupList isObject( P -- Re- -- -- If a didn't , record -- See ran: ][2] & checkForEsc() = -1 -- Let user abort yieldApp() " = "Re- &All y -- Problems more "Testing complete. The following could"&&\ were objectFromPoint(mousePosition buttonClick 4 svCDdrive, svBookPath WinExec( & "catalog2.exe",1) <= 32 N & " <= 32 warningMsgBox "The SoftKey Product Catalog can't be found." &\ "Put the MPC Wizard 3 CD CD-ROM " &&\ ) &&\ " " && "try running watchForMsg 4sCatalogMsgNum pAppPath = RegisterWindowMessage ("CAT_EXITING") translateWindowMessage on showWizard state = minimized untranslateWindowMessage 4 svBookEntered, sFlashCount 4stack sskFlashingBoxFillColor "textAndButtons" -- Initialize count flashing: i = 1 startUp -- Putting startup 8stuff here allows the -- image appear on #screen quickly. -- The 256-color status bar very bad "mode, so change 16 colors: displaybitsperpixel() < 8 x= 60,37.4375,100 , sFlashStatusBar, sShowStatusBarMsg makeStatusBarNormal lockScreen B"title" "wizardStatusBar" /= 240,95.5,100 -- Clear _since we don't use them on other lsDefaultText statusBarText N = "To learn about a feature, just nyour mouse over . Information 5that 4 will lfWizStatusBar : = 240,95.5,100 4logical slgFlashing = "To state <> minimized < 18 = 240,95.5,100 -- It's = 240,95.5,100 4s_mmdevices 4svTextFile 4saTestResults[][] startDLLs syserrornumber getDefaultPaths checkWinVersion -- Copy array holding test info. = uaTestResults -- Sort >results: twoDquicksort clearAllResults -- Unnecessary because we now include a maximize -- Deal fMTB bug prevents retoration user clicks allowRestoreWhenMin () < 8 "mainText" /= 240,95,100 closeGenMsgViewer -- Links program. Windows linkDLL "kernel" WORD getDriveType(INT) -- Where 0=A, 1=B, etc. Removable returns 2 ASetErrorMode( C GetPrivateProfileString(STRING, POINTER, BYTE GetTempDrive( GetTempFileName( DWORD GetVersion() WinExec( -- For locking & unlocking memory, & getting pointers: ] GlobalAlloc( u GlobalFree( GlobalHandle( GlobalLock( GlobalUnlock( checkDLL " 1) -- Turn off msgs. during -- Wizard RegisterWindowMessage ( ) -- receiving -defined Catalog. INT PeekMessage( flushMessageQueue handler. BMessageBeep( ) -- warnings. pMessageBox( ) -- Displays message box. RedrawWindow( -- Check asure Multimedia Extensions are loaded. X"mmsystem.dll" sndPlaySound( wave tests. waveOutGetDevCaps( ) -- midiOutGetDevCaps( ) -- midiOutCacheDrumPatches( ) -- midiOutShortMsg( midiOutOpen( midiOutClose( noMME X"TB30WIN. YieldApp() -- May be used Htbkmm dlls. horizontalDisplayRes() -- Graphics Tests. verticalDisplayRes() -- displayBitsPerPixel() -- checking popMenu( INT, displayColorPlanes() getWinIniVar( ) -- audio sendKeys( -- sending Esc. msg. getIniVar( ) -- turning MIDI setIniVar( ) -- X"TB30DOS. getDriveList() getCurrentDrive() fileExists( getCurrentDirectory( removeFile( copyFile( LONG getFreeDiskSpace( ileSize( isCDDrive( getCDDriveList() X"TB30DLG. saveAsDlg( openFileDlg( dialog( setValue( getValue( X"TB30DB3. openDBFile( findDBkey( setDBNavigateToDeleted( openDBIndexFile( getDBFieldValue( getDBErrorString( closeAllDBfiles() DBRecordCount() nextDBKey() firstDBKey() getDBFieldWidth( Aris general functions DLL. wiz. mscdexVer() textToClipboard( t ) -- Copies clipboard. LoWord( getLoByte( getHiByte( -- CD-ROM TESTS cdtest. -- CD drive DOUBLE TestRawThrough( 'MPCThrough( HMPCThrough2( ReadDiscStartEnd( TestThirdSeek( -- Smartdrv EnableSmartDrive( 0 SmartDriveStats( J SmartDriveCache( -- -- Pass a a 128 Ibuffer: -- We're version: AudioPercent( -- wizvxd.dll bitblt. ARE NOW LINKED & UNLINKED AT USE-TIME: 0) -- "Can't """ & 7 & ".""" & "Make either on hard disk directory where resides, DOS path." & "If you're should be, # still" &&\ = may be running low on . To remedy situation, try on Virtual Memory (see " &&\ "Control Panel Help manual directions)." f"Exit" xinstalled, properly." & k& """ "" can't without fRetry 4svCDdrive,svDefaultTargetPath,svBookPath, ZvFirstFixedDisk,vIsCD 1) -- a retry. getBookPath() -- Find vDriveList textlineCount( x"A" 0 -- It's xa CD i - 1) = 3 -- It's a -- It's a CD & ":\wiz3_cd.tbk") & ":\" & ) & ":\") -- You've gotten -- , so stop 0) -- pathErrorMsgs() -- Wrong ( no) CD showLoadingMsg setDefaultTargetPath( 4sWinVersion vLoWord getLoWord( ) & "." & E) = 1 & ".0" c <> 3.1 p < 3.1 "You " && &", but " &&\ " was designed 3.1."&&\ " experience problems you decide "What "want f"Continue" " && &", " &&\ " 3.1."&&\ " && "CD ." & "Put leave h fFirstFixedDisk ZvSlash 8) & ":\") & ":\" & at the bottom right of you -- BACKGROUND SCRIPT FOR MPC WIZARD 3.0 -- MISTER & MISCELLANEOUS ROUTINES statusBarText "wizardStatusBar" "To learn about a feature, just nyour mouse over ."&&\ "Information =that < will appear here." 4 sFlashStatusBar "To ." &&\ mainTextBounds setupMainText , (scrollAmt "textAndButtons" showGoBackButton B"goBack" showTipsButton B"troubleshootingTips" -- Show the appropriate title bitmap !screen: normalGraphic 5( (uSection ) && "Title" ) parentSection = "Find a Driver" lockScreen initDriverDB objectFromPoint(mousePosition flushMessageQueue() c"find a" uninitDriverDB getPath fTargetFile = 112 -- The F1 key. buttonClick = "Test Results" B"testResultsHelp" scrollMainText( ,fShift,fCtrl) -- GRAPHICS TESTS STUFF runColorTest logical plgShowTestResult \ llArrayElement lsMsg testInProgessMsg displaybitsperpixel() vResult D = "Unable determine color depth" &&\ Windows graphics driver." testNotRunCleanUp "screenColorDepth" warningMsgBox -- Set & record results only was successful: displayColorPlanes() lFormattedNum = "16" "less than 256" -- Record = 16 "32,768 65,536" 32,768 65,536" %("#" & sysThousand &"#") = recordTestResult(" && "colors")) setResultsButtonColor showOneTestResult Z, passedTroubleMsg() runResolutionTest Z lResult, lResultPhrase & = horizontalDisplayRes() verticalDisplayRes() screenResolution" resolution" &&\ && " H" && && "pixels" -- -- --drawDib01Bit100noPalette --drawDib01Bit40noPalette --drawDib04Bit100noPalette --drawDib04Bit40noPalette --drawDib08Bit100noPalette --drawDib08Bit40noPalette runDrawDibTest psTest, svCDdrive lsTitle, -- See we can link BLTTEST.DLL: linkBlttest() = -- We 0, so forget noVFWdll " -- We linked. preventScreenSaver showTestMsgViewer k&"Testing speed.",\ icon "clock", c"01Bit" SetPath( & "TESTGRAF\01BITBMP\") = "(1 = "(4 = "(8 c"40" ", 40% CPU Time)" -- Assume Percent = 100. ", 100% = callBlitDllFunctions( allowScreenSaver closeTestMsgViewer processResult ns psTitle, SetWindowName(" Bitmap Speed " & SetTimesToPlay(10) -- 10 default. c"40" = TestDib8Percent( yieldApp() pResult, lFormattedResult lsString, isType(real, Z > 0 -- A legit answer. %("#" & "###") & "k / sec." -- Problems: = getBlitErrorMsgs( -- Truly wierd problem: perform , resultsApproxMsg()) -- y -- Tell user a occurred: -- && "[ code:" && & "]" , passedTroubleAndApproxMsg() = -1 registering eclass."&&\ "Too many applications may be running. This "cannot d. Restart "try = -2 could xbe created. d"&&\ = -3 reading a file. x"&&\ "exist, corrupted. = -4 bitmaps vary = -5 = "Video higher xinstalled. -- showGraphicsBiosInfo fairWarning() loGenViewer = "genericViewer1" currentPage "graphicsBiosInfo" Device BIOS -- Link syserrornumber = 0 X"wizvxd. DWORD GetVideoData(POINTER) GetVideoBIOS( checkVxdDLL( r,sysErrorNumber) "deviceName" = getGraphicsDeviceName() "otherBiosInfo" = getGraphicsBiosInfo() unlinkDLL " %modal "IMPORTANT!"& "Trying information can"&&\ "cause 4problems "improperly written. If you afterwards experience"&&\ ^(lockups, Q, etc.), re-boot"&&\ computer." & "What swant f"Continue" "Cancel" lsReturn liHasInfo structure should be 278 Bytes ? = getWinPointer(280) .(12, 1( 22, freeWinPointer( "[no available]" ) = 1 -- Can't = "[unable obtain pSysError, pSysErrorNumber WIZVXD.DLL." &&\ task requested can't be performed." & "Make sure either on hard disk directory where "program resides, DOS path." & "If you're still" &&\ message, low on memory. To remedy "situation, turning on Virtual Memory (see " &&\ "Control Panel manual directions)." -- \ -- && "[ codes:" && & "/" & \ & "]" Perform Task" -- CD-ROM DRIVE runMscdexTest mscdexVer() "Pre-2.0" y256) &"."& ( k256) "[unknown]" MSCDEXversion", runCDtest pTest, piSmartDrvSwitch, lsSmartDrv, , lsMeasurement EnableSmartDrive( readCDfile() = -1 "Put " && ) && " ,"&&\ (callTestDll( < 0 -- A = -100 -- -100 means decided quit. sendKeys("{ } 5",0) -- -1 above = "A ." -- && "[ & "]" = "Couldn't c"3strokeAccess" -- It's = "ms." -- It's one Transfer Rate tests. = "kb/ -- Who knows, we super- transfer rates access times: %("#" & "#") -- CD- progress bar remains on )beginning , so force re-paint: = "tranRate40WithSD" forceReDraw ,svTextFile vFile testType, ZvResults ) - 97) vDriveNum vStartPtr = vEndPtr = ReadDiscStartEnd( "Your hidden duration EnableProgressWin(1) SetTestParameters(8192, 2048, 26, 1) -- sjw & 1 controls seek tracks skipped btwn reads. -- Default 8192. throughput 2K blocks !are -- during 2048. percent %part How much incremented -- between checkForEsc() <> -1 TestThirdSeek( , 100) -- - 100 seeks. c"tranRate100" TestRawThrough( TestMPCThrough( c"tranRate60" TestMPCThrough2( YieldApp() isSmartDriveCachingCD 4 svCDDrive Z lBinaryNum -- Report whether cache ( upperCase( [) ) - 65 V = SmartDriveCache( %"@b00000000" getSmartDriveVer() < 5.0 = "1" lptr = SmartDriveStats( liHexValue = .( 0, y256) & "." & ( k256) -- CD AUDIO runCDaudioTest psCDdevice, psType, Z lSysError, lTrackNum ! llgEscPressed callMCI(" " && w && "alias shareable wait") CDFile = "stereo" = "mono" " & & " on tmsf on 27") -- Stop music Esc key hit. 'CD Audio." & k&"You "hearing something!" & stop $.",\ dAudio", lTrackRange = "5" && " " && ( + 1) vError = " && N&& " "Didn't vTestResult k& failedTroubleMsg() "Played" = wasCDescPressed( u$ = "cdAudio", -- early, so post msg. } 5",0) pTrackNum function determines milliseconds -- First figure *what lEndPos = 8 " && && " length j " && && " " && " -- Millisecond conversion xcompletely accurate a fudge factor + 500) < getCDdevice vNumMCIcds sysinfo cdaudio quantity") "No CD /devices "No CD vCDletter vCDdrives getCDDriveList() vCDnum (textlineCount( A) - 1) ++ 1) vPtr = -- Check each drivername vPlayerName p" && i) GetPrivateProfileString("mci", A,"Zilch", ,256," 4.ini") vEntry vNumWords -- Got -- ,devicename. +MCI CD [)" &&\ correctly." ," && $)&& " no longer valid." -- WAVE -- NOTE: Other wave stuff called multiple backgrounds runWaveAudioTest *, lsResult, lsFilepath, lsFileStub lsFilePath = getWavePath( -- Break & let mmtimer setWaveTimer -- If cancels, give up: noWaveFile a standard l&be played: canPlaySound( <> "OK" -- It , so " && && "type waveaudio waveFile (on 27") -- V." & <..",\ &waveAudio", = wasEscPressed(" M. = -- } 5",0) -- Called copying 16s44 temp -- Needed because Y" "skips" immediately 's copied. 4 sa16s44statusTimer[2] [1] = timerStart(single,1500,500, >[2] = timerNotify pTimerID -- Calls [2], sTestRunning [2] <> waveAudio16s44, -- Invalid timerStop( psTestFileName, " = " ssTempWavefile { = "16 get16s44File( -- Even -- ve already tried & secure -- so (i.e., , & "testsnd\" & & ".wav" -- Secures a 16bit, 44k, sound. 3runAllTests handler calls directly getWaveTempFile( fileExists( ) = 1 query6s44box( copyWaveTempFile( 6. & " Z lFileSize lsSkipMsg, lpaMsgPage 1 = getFileSize( . & " X < 1 closeGenMsgViewer w' 16S44.WAV." 5SKIP "44.25 kHz 5, but 7others." -- Ask o(GetTempDrive(0)) & ":" %("#" & I5 = "Playing g816- f( requires 5uses"&&\ store files (located on 05" &&\ & "). L5" && && "must have"&&\ )least"&& "bytes .7COPY permitting. on"&&\ V;"&& session ;."&&\ "copy16s44msg" dlgBoxGetValue( psFile , lTmpDrv lpBuff = %144) -- Use Q9TEMP dir, v, WIN/SYSTEM GetTempFileName( k,"wiz",0, = pointerSTRING(0, ) & ":" 2 & " 16s44. E+ 16 getFreeDiskSpace( removeFile( noDiskSpace showGenMsgViewer ("Copying k&"Please ..."),\ copyFile( ) <> 1 cantCopy pTmpDrv, pFileSize 8"Sorry, ;)don't enough on" &&\ e9" && T && " ethe" && ] && " -" &\ 9" && & "." &\ -- MIDI playMidi fInst, psTestName, :TestAll, laStatus[] 1] = "bach. g", " <> "OK" -- It 7., so h2] = = "midiAudioMelodic" plgTestAll = puts up annoying msg no mapper, so disable lsDisableWarning = getIniVar("mciseq.drv","disablewarning"," .INI") setIniVar(" "(melodic)" "(percussive)" & "." & 1+"&&\ =.",\ = playOneMidiSound( <> " < 8 <> " -- Restore original setting: < 82 <> " k> = x? box 2] = 2] = 2] = -- } 5",0) Hreference Bugliest functions existance 4svPrevKeyCached, svKeyNum 4svPrevPatchCached, svPatchNum, sWizSysError Z vMIDIhandle, & keep checking m= = " -- Get a openMidi( <> "OK" = = " -- && "[ Code:" &&\ -- & "]" -- It's a & we -- dDpatches: checkMidiMsg( sendMidiMsg( -- We've DDave Clark Five): cacheMelodicPatch "uncache" -- We [? = " ~B = -- && "[ -- & "]" -- It's a -- Try 201,0,0)) 2can: cacheDrumPatch -- Turn lC percussion instrument: %= -1 -- Escape 1] = <; low- playPercLowEnd playPercHiEnd 1] = A = " A = " -- && "[ -- & "]" MidiOutClose( B = " -- A8 thru MCI: HB = mciPlay(" yB <> " 2] = getInfoText psResult fMIDIhandle, -- Program change channel 16 4207,0,0) Erelative volume controller -- 80 wlistening." 191,7,80) note on. 127) -- 127 = highest velocity. 201,0,0) -- 80 185,7,80) 127) -- 127 = fCache -- Allocate 256 caching. -- A4 chunk indicate -- instruments on base (12) channels. pointerWORD ( * 2, ,4097) -- If *Cbe cached, zso now. midiOutCachePatches( ,2) -- 2 BEST FIT. -- Clear -- -- * 2, [!,4097) r!,4) -- 4 MIDI_UNCACHE. drum u856) -- -- * 2, 6",33280) -- If midiOutCacheDrumPatches( ",2) -- 2 -- -- * 2, ",33280) #,4) -- 4 --#define MIDI_CACHE_ALL BESTFIT +QUERY x: = 7:16) vSuccess midiOutOpen( :,65535,0,0,0) -- 65535 Mapper. lError = " {< 65 HThere map." noMapper( Odoesn't vReturn = ;) -- = "OK" J Wizard-specific > msgs: --MMSYSERR_BADDEVICEID= 2 --MMSYSERR_ALLOCATED= 4 --MMSYSERR_NOMEM= 7 --MIDIERR_NODEVICE = 68 --MIDIERR_NOMAP = 66 fLpStruct,fMsg, -- I've commented implement really isn't needed: 4svNoMapper k& "Do dwithout -- " f"Yes" -- 0,0,0,0) -- -- Just yprompting: 0,0,0,0) fTestFile, " && J & " g &&\ ~.midiFile on 27 . -- lEscPressed = % = " r& "." % = " = "OK" q& "," & " pMediaType " && 9 && " V" && x && " y+" && " W" && && " " && " -- -- + 500) < fMsgRetValue = "OK" = "Specified invalid." & Shardware busy HC data."&&\ " fMidiHandle,fStatusByte,fLoHi,fHiLo pointerBYTE(0, -- Key -- Volume (unused) -- Retrieve pointerDWORD(0, midiOutShortMsg( ) -- Pass INFO FROM MICROSOFT: --typedef pC midioutcaps_tag { F wMid; /* manufacturer ID */ sysSuspendMessages lPrevMatColor = matColor "showMotion" -- S" && & "." \ "testingMotion" vMovieSize & " H" & Q7playVFWmovie( r9 = 0 = " #[ = & "." 7isRightCodecInstalled() d0 = " R Properly" ~[ = & "." 0 = " stats getVfwStats array -- which & a category: -- showStatsWindow( ;] = M] = -- It's we use: 2 <> " 9 -- ... 2 & "." & -- } 5",0) pMovieSize, psVFWcaption, ^, lsVfwStatsInfo -- Prepare & aStatistics "vfwStats" 4] = 0 _ = "No frames were ,_ = "Frames && " 3] - \ 5] &&"fps" 7] &&" "moviePlayed" = " 3." && 1] = bitsperpel") & "- 2] = 3] = 4] = - 5] = minal G")/1000 j 6] = ")/1000 -- Avoid division 6] > 0 7] = 3] -\ 4]) / 7] = 0 pPos (mainWinMidX() - (( )/2)) calcVFWVertPos( eclient )" && m && " @realize on 27 @ -- showTestingMsg -- If value, Fimage didn't 0# = " dvideo portion Gc."&&\ @probably update cruntime" &&\ U on saTestResults[][] \ llCnt1 Z>nd gAVI Hgetting four- QgNameVideoCompressor %S) = 1 lVFWcaption = "Unknown Method" =pVfwCodes & "," & psVfwCode, lsPath -- If e, there won't be a Z` & "testvfw\" f & "CIN") "vfwCinepak" & "IND") "vfwIntelIndeo" & "MS1") "vfwMsv1" 's a = "CRAM" = "MSVC" = "IV32" = "IV31" = "RT21" = "CVID" = "0,0" vMainWinMidX = ) / 2) vPos = "0,0" ) /2) pageUnitsToClient( fWinYsize pageUnitsToFrame( ) - 10) / 2 ] / 2) ) -- MPEG runMpegTest fScreenSize, motion d & "testmisc\mpegtest.mpg" %WS_OVERLAPPEDWINDOW " && 13565952 " && /j = k& movieErrorMsg() @g = " eanifile " && "fullScreen" 1state maximized") vLargePicHandle on 27 II -- h = " h = " impegVideo", Tl = -- } 5",0) ."&&\ $nnecessary software"&&\ -- ALL m (more m slgDontShowAllTestsMsg Zstack lskRetValue s CD r" && Rh) && " ]m,"&&\ "allTestsMessage") = " ) = " runAllTestsReally "chooseSpecs") <> " goNow pskMpcSpecs tspecs cwants view t) = 0u USED BY " A _____ DRIVER" PAGES 4svDBKeyWidth, lsFileName = driverFileName J7"Reading u CD." &\ N...", openDBFile( j & "drivbase\" & & ".dbf") DBerror setDBNavigateToDeleted(0) openDBIndexFile( ~k & " & ".ndx") getDBRecordCount() vTotalRecords firstDBKey() dropDownItems comboBox "selectDriver" = getDBFieldValue("DRIVERNAME") nextDBKey() svDBkeyWidth getDBFieldWidth(" closeAllDBFiles() selectChange fKeyName findDBkey( >) &\ padding( m & fillDisplayFields() "wizPath" = WIZPATH") fError getDBErrorString( ;s"An occured trying accessing 9wdatabase copyDriver textToClipboard( ) <> 0 )tclipboard." 6z THAT SHOW, HIDE, OR ADJUST THE MAIN TEXT CONGLOMORATE pskBnds, piScrollNum hroutine realigns -- " . To exactly the be. Then =, & -- userproperty zrepresents ymount lines tbuttons are -- clicked. However, za negative. If F-10 would be siScrollNum ?v lgpageButtonsGroup, lgrMainText3d, lgMainText \ llX1bounds, llX2bounds, llY1bounds, llY2bounds \ llButtonsGroupHeight "maintext3d" zwhole reAlign3dObject t. & t. offsets ( -- llHorizOffset = ( syspageunitsperpixel) * 2 -- llVertOffset = ( /el) * 2 ) -- + ) -- - "page3d" "buttons3d" > 0 -- Sometimes %y too k, so "button3dRect" reAlignText B"firstPage" lskMainTextBnds l) * 11 l) * 11 T) + n) + Z--- The MPC Wizard. --- Copyright (c) 1992-1994, Aris Entertainment. All rights reserved. --- Version 3.0 -- MISTER AND MISCELLANEOUS ROUTINES k --This prevents 4books on the --SYSSTARTUPBOOKS ToolBook WIN.INI running instance 4svTextFile B"title" "textAndButtons" B"goBack" B"troubleshootingTips" "testmisc\cdtest.fil" sysMediaSuspend = tbkmmdevices 4s_mmdevices 4sResultsNotSaved dlgBoxGetValue( "resultsNotSaved") lockScreen saveResults() = "Set up the printer now?" \ f"&Print Now" 9Up..." "&Cancel" printResults quitNow() = Up..." printSetup cleanUp -- Reset flag Mthey "Do you want f"Yes" = "no" { loGenViewer messageBeep(32) "genericViewer1" currentPage a = " %modal lRetValue = uRetValue isOpen close buttonClick >= pushButton 4sTestRunning "wizardStatusBar" /"main" c"Find a" ssTempWavefile fileExists( ) = 1 removeFile( 0) <> 1 warningMsgBox " ogram has tried failed " &&\ "delete v" && & "."&&\ "Try deleting yourself exiting." callMCI(" waveFile") MIDIFile") CDFile") aniFile") SetErrorMode(0) -- Turn on Windows error msgs. -- Prevents user going evious Ctrl- Sarrow key. t -- saving enterWindow objectFromPoint(mousePosition . WE'RE NOW USING BACK, SO DON'T UNCOMMENT THIS. getBookPath fKey,fShift,fCtrl keyEnter showAboutBox scrollMainText "mainText" -- PgUp B"previousPage" -- PgDn B"nextPage" B"firstPage" B"lastPage" textToClipboard( scrollText fWhat,fAmt setDefaultSettings vDriverPages "installGraphics,installSound,installCDROM" combobox "DRIVERNAME" "no driver selected" "WIZPATH" "VERSIONDAT" "SUPPORTED" "INSTALLPRO" clearResultsRecField deviceInfo -- Returns a psString -- specified arameter plNum: padding \ llCnt1 lsNewString > <0 deQuote( resetWizard -- @Run just 4you're making a distributable lOriginalPage = B"runAllTests" = " B"requirements" = clearAllResults lFindPages = CD-ROM selectDriver" = "[no "wizPath" = "[no "report1" "report2" "report3" enabled B"withSmartDrive" = "CD Audio B"stereo" = "waveRadioButtons" = B"1" = B"4" = B"6" = "patches" = " : Acoustic Grand Piano" 6" = " %Bass Drum" pLastPatchNum pLastKeyNum = 35 B"100" = B"8bit" = "Video B"3" = "Multimedia Applications" B"minimize" = "detailedResults" "speakerTest" = B"mpc 1" "chooseSpecs" = init aboutBoxInit retValue dialog(aboutBoxBOX -- VFW-RELATED DLLS WE LINK AT RUNTIME linkVidFind "vidfind.dll" lSysSuspend = x8000) -- during sysErrorNumber = 0 linkDLL " INT NameVideoCompressor(POINTER) -- AVI type. lSysError = syserrornumber <> 0 linkBlttest "blttest. DOUBLE TestDib8(WORD) Percent( INT SetPath(STRING) WindowName( 'TimesToPlay( "OK" k& failedSpeakerMsg()) preventScreenSaver " && && "alias wavefile wait") audio & " on tmsf con 27") -- Stop music Esc key hit. showTestMsgViewer "Testing channels." & k&"You "hearing something!" & k& "Press stop icon "waveAudio", lError = play closeTestMsgViewer "For possible causes, click Troubleshooting screen quitting box." psFilename, psDevice 4sWinVersion , lsLine >= 4 -- 4 shouldn't garbage. checkCueing( ) -- See can cue . If so, definately there. cued, hese other tests. checkDevCaps( ) -- Check waveOutDevCaps midiOutDevCaps. --MCI reports: " range." = "Your" && && " xresponding." present." && " = "An unknown origin occurred." checkInis( CI" && && " CI" && && " = "wav=waveaudio" g=sequencer" are missing U""" & """ ""[mci extensions]"" section = "OK" 4svCDdrive,fileList " && && " soundFile sndPlaySound(0,0) " && && " -- Failed vPtr = getWinPointer(64) -- (64 amt. WAVEOUTCAPS structure, MIDIOUTCAPS . Since we don't doesn't matter.) waveOutGetDevCaps(0, midiOutGetDevCaps(0, freeWinPointer( lsDriver, lsItemVal, lsReturn + = "mciwave.drv" 6 = " P = "mciseq. X = " getIniVar(" 4.ini") y -- There's no = 2 -- Incorrect getWinIniVar(" = 3 -- No statement. -- TEST RESULTS LIST --saTestResults[][] elements: --[1][1] --[1][2] --[1][3] specs --[1][4] --[1][5] level 1, only minimum --[1][6] --[1][7] & recommendations --[1][8] --[1][9] Bcolor --[1][10] --[1][11] --[1][12] --[1][13] " obtained showOneTestResult \plTestNameElement, psTestResult, psInfoText -- Show = oneTestResultInit = setValue( ,"static testPerformed",\ ][2]) /mpcSpec",\ ][3]) qinfoText", oneTestResultBOX recordTestResult , pResult, pMsg P%guy stores "appropriate array, returns 4 svResultsDirty, dimensions( ][1] = ][4] = ][13] = setResultsButtonColor pTestResult @'Level 1, setOneColor Bnow: setOneButtonColor \plSpec -- Sets (pass)?: compareMpcSpec( ][1],\ -- + 4] = 120,37.4375,100 -- + 4] = -- It !, so + 4] = , pRequirement, -- Compares (handles L <> -- could q, non-conforming added: isType(real, c"3strokeAccess" = "screenResolution" = "played" \plTestNameElementElement ][getButtonSpecNum()] J][1]\ testNotRunCleanUp -- Re-sets 2 Tested" 4logical slgTestRan ][1] = ][4] = ][13] = = 240,50,20 writeTestResults stack pskSizes --Send function a list *3 sizes ( monospaced . It places *formatted *DETAILEDRESULTS --recfield. *leading spaces -wired. itself --No CRLFs recordfields, please! If )ish skip a U, use a -- linefeed ( T). It will be converted Z lBrokenupLines lsResults lskOneResult !,llCnt2,llCnt3 X!][4] <> "" f] & breakupLines( textlineCount( -- Pass formatTextLine processing: = = 0 psText, psTitles -- Breaks up lines necessary, preserving whole -separated lists, each acceptable formatTextline. lReturn lsTest, lsMpc, break1Field( -- Format passing vCol1 vCol2 vCol3 "0,""" & & """," & ",L,3,""" & & """," ",L,3,""" & & """," ",L" & "0,""" & %("-", ) & """," & ",L,3,""" & %("-", ) & """," ",L,3,""" & &("-", ) & """," ",L" & piSize, lsWords, J) - 1 < -- T -- 4converts lfs crlfs. ) - 1 > -- Too-big a g, so a forced separation. ) - 1 <> -- -- Remove J4extra 1991,1992 Asymetrix Corporation 7following formats data -- It's useful creating columnar a single proportional font, such %Courier. 4 parameters, so -- on a !give Here -- four order. -- 1: precede -- 2: -- 3: occupy. -- 4: 8takes ""R","L","C", "Dn" ( integer). Left justifies within \6alloted Right Centers "Dn" Uses talignment tpoints n positions -- Say %follows: -- 123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345 Item1 Item2 -- In Fitem1 S-justified -- 10 Fitem2 Fitem3 t-aligned -- To ",10,"L",5," ",10,"R",5," .3",10,"D7") whatever 1991,1992 -- Modified HMichael I. Samett, 1992. ZreturnLine equal k4 <> 0 "Itemcount :" & k& "Wrong handler." sizeditem t = "L" t = "R" )) & t = "C" leadingspaces trailingspaces ^) & returnline t = "D" decloc "When ttabbing,"&&\ " 9must specify a z." & k& "Example: D5" dotloc ~(".", values vcontain a 2 -- Removes beg. & quotes & G2 = V2 = 4svDefaultTargetPath, showGenMsgViewer "Getting >." & "Please '...", &clock" "17,19,10" closeGenMsgViewer vTargetFile saveAsDlg(" :.txt", 6Files,*. *",1) saveReport( x)) = c fTargetFile ssText -- Create overwrite exists already. "560" { && " a Read-Only ;," &&\ ,copied k. No g;been saved.")," Saving @." & )...", = getHeader( 8) & -- Write -- Close \ llNum --Delete c"&" ~("&", --Convert "LF" c"LF" ~("LF", + 1) V~D" c"~D" ~("~D", + 1) c"~T" ~("~T", + 1) isObject( X7][1] -- Clear aBold 7][1] 3= 240,50,20 7][4] = sfDetailedResults N." & " i-...", "17,19,10" n = targetWindow = = 0,0,0 1440,1440,2987,1033 lskSysHistoryRecord = sysSuspendMessages = = 144,144,0 -- MESSAGE FUNCTIONS/HANDLERS showLoadingMsg c"wiz3_cd.tbk" -- #msg. cloading #/CD: E information uECD."& p/...", testInProgessMsg 1cleanup problems , so B = \ -- " progress." pIconResource, plgShowTestResult d7 -- Use Fspecial -- H, so modify D box: k& "Pressing abort testing"&&\ concludes." "testingWindow" = D = \ loGenMsgViewer = "genericMsgViewer" "genericMsgText" = normalGraphic B"genericMsgIcon" = DfMsg, fTitle MessageBox(hWnd, " U1.\nThis U2.", "App", MB_OK | MB_ICONQUESTION); G48) -- Exclamation noMemMsg E"Unable allocate global M5Quit 6(" &\ more concurrently .Lprograms, ppaPage, psCaption, psMsg : boxes q = " u <> "msg" = $I = " failedTroubleMsg 8indicate "After clicking OK, further available passedTroubleMsg "If Jexperienced resultsApproxMsg o1approximate: passedTroubleAndApproxMsg v() & CREATED BY ASYMETRIX (c) <0 nSize ghMem = GlobalAlloc(66, GlobalLock( / pMem P = GlobalHandle( V>= GlobalUnlock( GlobalFree( twoDquicksort fArray[][] Hreference,sortColumn,dtype 4stbk_noSwap twoDquicksrt K, 1, _ lo, hi, hi > lo , lo, ((lo+hi) (lo+1) stbk_noswap , lo, lst-1, +1,hi, a, b Ztemp farray[a][i] b][i] b][i] *realigning 3D rectangles ( reAlign3dObject graphic pgObject 4s_anim_idleAnimations Z newPos & lskObjs, lskWiz3DeeRect Z lgrRec = wiz3DeeRect sz = pupp = syspageUnitsPerPixel sz > sz > inOut threeDStyle b = xpix = -1* syspageunitsperpixel ypix = -1* ll = lr = ur = ul = bottomLine topline m"topLine" ul,lr checkForEsc -- , 1992 ZwFlags,dwBytes,cnt,hMsg,lpMsg 0 -- flags 32 -- froom spare R = 0 w = 0 OPeekMessage -- keyboard %O we ,sysClientHandle,256,264,1) -- END -- SCREENSAVER These screensaver handlers typed That's because a MTB bug won't let a translateWindowMessage control 3 coexist ;:below allowScreenSaver untranslateWindowMessage 0x0112 --0x0203 +T WM_SYSCOMMAND: on 0 noScreenSaver hwnd, wmsg, wp, lplo, lphi -- 0xF140 = SC_SCREENSAVE ( J4 bits :;used internally (wp bitAnd 0xFFF0) = 0 forceRedraw -- Force re- lPtr = 0,0 RedrawWindow(windowHandle *,0,0x0101) wizardPalette oldWizardPalette NewWizardPalette cdAudio CD (Redbook) Audio Level 1 and Level 2 MPC -- required. played played played played 3strokeAccessWithoutSD CD-ROM Drive Average Access Time Level 1 MPC -- 1000 ms (1 second) or less required. Level 2 MPC -- 400 ms or less required. tranRate100WithSD CD-ROM Drive Transfer Rate (100% CPU Time, SmartDrive Enabled) Level 1 MPC -- 150 kb/second required. Level 2 MPC -- 300 kb/second required. tranRate100WithoutSD CD-ROM Drive Transfer Rate (100% CPU Time, without SmartDrive) Level 1 MPC -- 150 kb/second required. Level 2 MPC -- 300 kb/second required. tranRate40WithSD CD-ROM Drive Transfer Rate (40% CPU Time, SmartDrive Enabled) Level 1 & Level 2 MPC -- 150 kb/second required. tranRate40WithoutSD CD-ROM Drive Transfer Rate (40% CPU Time, without SmartDrive) Level 1 and Level 2 MPC -- 150 kb/second required. tranRate60WithSD CD-ROM Drive Transfer Rate (60% CPU Time, SmartDrive Enabled) Level 1 MPC -- none. Level 2 MPC -- 300 kb/second recommended. tranRate60WithoutSD CD-ROM Drive Transfer Rate (60% CPU Time, without SmartDrive) Level 1 MPC -- none. Level 2 MPC -- 300 kb/second recommended. screenColorDepth Color Capability Level 1 MPC -- 16 colors minimum, 256 colors recommended. Level 2 MPC -- 65,536 colors required. 65536 65536 drawDib01Bit100noPalette Graphics Display Test (1-bit, 100% CPU Time) Level 1 MPC -- 350k pixels/second recommended. Level 2 MPC -- none. drawDib01Bit40noPalette Graphics Display Test (1-bit, 40% CPU Time) Level 1 MPC -- 140k pixels/second recommended. Level 2 MPC -- 1,229k pixels (1.2m pixels)/second recommended. drawDib04Bit100noPalette Graphics Display Test (4-bit, 100% CPU Time) Level 1 MPC -- 350k pixels/second recommended. Level 2 MPC -- none. drawDib04Bit40noPalette Graphics Display Test (4-bit, 40% CPU Time) Level 1 MPC -- 140k pixels/second recommended. Level 2 MPC -- 1,229k pixels (1.2m pixels)/second recommended. drawDib08Bit100noPalette Graphics Display Test (8-bit, 100% CPU Time) Level 1 MPC -- 350k pixels/second recommended. Level 2 MPC -- none. drawDib08Bit40noPalette Graphics Display Test (8-bit, 40% CPU Time) Level 1 MPC -- 140k pixels/second recommended. Level 2 MPC -- 1,229k pixels (1.2m pixels)/second recommended. vfwCinepak Microsoft Video for Windows (Cinepak method) Level 1 and Level 2 MPC -- none. vfwIntelIndeo Microsoft Video for Windows (Intel Indeo method) Level 1 and Level 2 MPC -- none. vfwMsv1 Microsoft Video for Windows (MS Video 1 method) Level 1 and Level 2 MPC -- none. midiAudioMelodic MIDI Audio (Melodic) Level 1 and Level 2 MPC -- required. played played played played midiAudioPercussive MIDI Audio (Percussive) Level 1 and Level 2 MPC -- required. played played played played mpegVideo MPEG Video Level 1 and Level 2 MPC -- none. mscdexVersion MSCDEX Version Level 1 and Level 2 MPC-- Version 2.2 or greater. screenResolution Screen Resolution Level 1 and Level 2 MPC -- 640 by 480 pixels 640 480 640 480 640 480 640 480 waveAudio16m11 Wave Audio -- 16-bit, 11 kHz, mono Level 1 MPC -- 16-bit recommended. Level 2 MPC -- required. played played played waveAudio16s11 Wave Audio -- 16-bit, 11 kHz, stereo Level 1 MPC -- stereo desirable. Level 2 MPC -- required. played played waveAudio16m22 Wave Audio -- 16-bit, 22 kHz, mono Level 1 MPC -- 16-bit recommended. Level 2 MPC -- required. played played played waveAudio16s22 Wave Audio -- 16-bit, 22 kHz, stereo Level 1 MPC -- stereo desirable. Level 2 MPC -- required. played played waveAudio16m44 Wave Audio -- 16-bit, 44 kHz, mono Level 1 MPC -- 44 kHz desirable. Level 2 MPC -- required. played played waveAudio16s44 Wave Audio -- 16-bit, 44 kHz, stereo Level 1 MPC -- 44 kHz desirable, stereo optional. Level 2 MPC -- required. played played waveAudio08m11 Wave Audio -- 8-bit, 11 kHz, mono Level 1 and Level 2 MPC -- required. played played played played waveAudio08s11 Wave Audio -- 8-bit, 11 kHz, stereo Level 1 MPC -- stereo optional. Level 2 MPC -- required. played played waveAudio08m22 Wave Audio -- 8-bit, 22 kHz, mono Level 1 and Level 2 MPC -- required. played played played played waveAudio08s22 Wave Audio -- 8-bit, 22 kHz, stereo Level 1 MPC -- stereo optional. Level 2 MPC -- required. played played waveAudio08m44 Wave Audio -- 8-bit, 44 kHz, mono Level 1 MPC -- 44 kHz desirable. Level 2 MPC -- required. played played waveAudio08s44 Wave Audio -- 8-bit, 44 kHz, stereo Level 1 MPC -- 44 kHz desirable, stereo optional. Level 2 MPC -- required. played played ***************************************************************************** SOFTKEY INTERNATIONAL'S MPC WIZARD TEST RESULTS ***************************************************************************** TEST PERFORMED MPC SPECS RESULTS ----------------- ------------------- ---------- TEST PERFORMED MPC SPECS RESULTS ----------------- ------------------- ---------- - page firstPage 11,18 selectChars searchmode title The title of the screen you're viewing. statusBarText S O F T K E Y I N T E R N A T I O N A L P R E S E N T S . . .. N T SS 307,420,419,418 xrecordFields troubleshootingTips .&+ +E .&+ +E buttonClick If you encountered a problem with any of the tests on this screen, click this button to see a list of possible causes. statusBarText goBack .&+ +E w, #? .&+ +E Test Results sTestJumpPage KvuSection UparentSection buttonClick w, #? button to return to the Click this button to return to the Test Results screen. wizardStatusBar screen. sTestJumpPage UparentSection mouseEnter Click this button to return to the previous screen. statusBarText sectionButtons go What's an MPC? Click this button to learn about the Multimedia PC standards for Level 1 and Level 2. statusBarText &What's an MPC? go MPC Tests Click this button to choose the MPC test you'd like to run. statusBarText MPC &Tests go Find a Driver Click this button to locate a graphics, sound, or CD-ROM driver on the MPC Wizard CD. statusBarText Find a &Driver go Test Results Click this button to view, save, or print the cumulative results of all tests performed during this MPC Wizard session. statusBarText Test &Results softKey catalog Click this button to launch other multimedia applications included on the MPC Wizard CD. statusBarText Soft&Key Catalog Cancel sTestRunning Are you sure you want to exit this program? sResultsNotSaved buttonClick buttonDown Click this button to exit the MPC Wizard program. statusBarText E&xit textAndButtons mainText mainText mainText pstatusBarText This is informational text. wizardStatusBar scrollAmt mouseEnter This is informational text. Use the buttons immediately below the text to copy it or page through it. statusBarText mainText3d in,ms wiz3DeeRect bottomLine topLine pageButtonsGroup buttonsPlaceHolder buttons3d in,ms ThreeDeeRect in,ms wiz3DeeRect bottomLine topLine button3drect pageButtons copyText .&+ +E .&+ +E mainText textToClipboard buttonClick Click this button to copy all pages of the above text to the Windows clipboard. statusBarText &Copy Text firstPage .&, 8 mainText textPages buttonClick Click this button to go to the first page of text. statusBarText previousPage mainText scrollText siScrollNum textPages buttonClick Click this button to go to the previous page of text. statusBarText nextPage +",!Y mainText scrollText siScrollNum textPages buttonClick Click this button to go to the next page of text. statusBarText lastPage +",!Y mainText scrollText siScrollNum textPages buttonClick Click this button to go to the last page of text. statusBarText page3d in,ms ThreeDeeRect in,ms wiz3DeeRect bottomLine topLine textPages This is the page of text you are currently viewing. statusBarText title title This is the title of the screen you're viewing. statusBarText bottomLine topLine wizardStatusBar To learn about a feature, just move your mouse over it. Information about that feature will appear here. in,ms ThreeDeeRect in,ms wiz3DeeRect bottomLine topLine textPages This is the page of text you are currently viewing. statusBarText title title This is the title of the screen you're viewing. statusBarText bottomLine topLine wizardStatusBar To learn about a feature, just move your mouse over it. Information about that feature will appear here.{/ What's an MPC? nextPage enterPage B"nextPage" 1845,1065,9300,6200 mainTextBounds scrollAmt What's an MPC? uSection W H A T ' S A N M P C ? MPC stands for Multimedia Personal Computer. The Windows versions of SoftKey International's MediaClips series of software were designed to run only on MPC-compatible computers. Your computer is considered MPC compatible if it conforms to the minimum hardware and software requirements set by the Multimedia PC Marketing Council. The Council has defined two sets of specifications for MPCs, known as Level 1 and Level 2. Level 1 is the base level, and includes the following minimum requirements: Computer with a 386SX or compatible microprocessor (CPU); 2 megabytes of RAM; 3.5" floppy drive, 1.44 MB capacity; 30 megabyte hard drive; 2-button mouse; 101-key keyboard; Serial, parallel, MIDI I/O, and joystick ports; Windows 3.0 with the Multimedia Extensions, or Windows 3.1 or higher; MSCDEX driver, version 2.2 or greater; CD-ROM drive capable of transferring data at a sustained rate of 150 kilobytes per second without taking up more than 40% of your computer's CPU time, an average seek time of 1 second or less, CD digital audio (Red Book audio) outputs, and front-panel volume control; 8-bit wave audio (digitized sound) playback at 22.05 kHz and 11.02 kHz sampling rates, using no more than 10% of your computer's CPU time; 8-bit, 11.025 kHz wave audio recording capability with microphone level input; MIDI (music synthesizer) with the ability to play back multi-voice, multi-timbral sounds, 6 melody notes simultaneously, and 2 percussive notes simultaneously; On-board ability to mix CD audio (Red Book), synthesizer, and wave sounds into one stereo line source out of the computer's back panel; VGA-compatible display adapter and monitor with a 640 x 480 pixel resolution. Although 16 colors is the minimum requirement for MPC machines, the photos displayed in SoftKey International's MediaClips programs were meant to be viewed in 256 colors or greater. 640 x 480 pixels with 256 colors is recommended by the MPC Marketing Council, and strongly recommended by SoftKey International. Level 2 includes all of the specifications for Level 1 mentioned above, and adds the following minimum requirements: Computer with a 486SX or compatible microprocessor (CPU) running at 25 MHz; 4 megabytes of RAM (8 megabytes recommended); 160 megabyte hard drive; CD-ROM drive with a sustained data rate of 300 kilobytes per second. It is recommended that the drive accomplish this without taking up more than 60% of your computer's CPU time. The average seek time must be 400 milliseconds or less. The drive must be XA-ready and multisession capable. XA is a method of storing data on a CD that allows for the near simultaneous playback of audio, video, and data. Multisession capability is the ability to read information that was added to the original information on the CD. 16-bit wave audio (digitized sound) at 44.1kHz, 22.05 kHz, and 11.02 kHz sampling rates, in mono and stereo. No more than 10% of your computer's CPU time should be taken up playing 22.05 kHz and 11.02 kHz sounds. It is recommended that no more than 15% of CPU time be taken up playing 44.1kHz audio; VGA-compatible display adapter and monitor with a 640 x 480 pixel resolution in 65,536 (16-bit) colors. The MPC Wizard tests your system for several of the above-mentioned requirements. The tests will assist you in determining whether your system conforms to MPC specifications...... page 1 of 5? MPC Tests go CD-ROM Drive Tests enterPage CD-ROM Drive Tests" MPC Tests uSection 1845,1065,9300,4020 mainTextBounds scrollAmt M P C T E S T Sw The MPC Wizard provides you with a suite of tests to determine how well your computer performs several multimedia-related tasks. The tests are divided into four parts: CD-ROM Drive Tests, Graphics Tests, Sound Tests, and Motion Video Tests. Each part is accessible by clicking the appropriate button below. An extensive amount of information about multimedia in general and the tests in particular can be found in these parts. If you're unfamiliar with the MPC Wizard version 3--and especially if you're new to multimedia on a PC--we suggest you begin by clicking these buttons. Once you understand multimedia and the MPC Wizard tests, you may want to click the Auto Run All Tests button. Doing so will bring you to the Test Results screen and automatically run nearly all of the MPC Wizard tests back to back. The Test Results screen uses colors to let you see at a glance just how well your own system stacks up against several of the MPC Council's requirements and recommendations. Click the Test Results Screen Help button when you're on the Test Results screen for more information about that section. mation about that section. page 1 of 2 22 go CD-ROM Drive Tests Make sure that your CD-ROM drive is performing up to speed. Click this button for an introduction to the CD-ROM drive tests. statusBarText CD-R&OM Drive Tests go Graphics Tests Get information about your graphics display performance in Windows. Click this button for an introduction to the graphics tests. statusBarText &Graphics Tests go Sound Tests Check your system's ability to play CD audio, wave, and MIDI sounds. Click this button for an introduction to the sound tests. statusBarText &Sound Tests go Motion Video Tests See if you can play Video for Windows and MPEG files. Click this button for an introduction to the motion video tests. statusBarText Motion &Video Tests go Test Results runAllTests buttonClick onClick runAllTests If you're already familiar with MPCs and the MPC Wizard tests, click this button to automatically run each test in succession. statusBarText &Auto Run All Tests CD-ROM Drive Tests 1, #b tranRate100 report3 svCDdrive lgrSDbutton isSmartDriveCachingCD getSmartDriveVer report2 withSmartDrive Not Loaded report1 enterPage report3 [N/A] report2 report1 noInfo 1845,1065,9300,4250 mainTextBounds scrollAmt showTipsButton showGoBackButton selectChars MPC Tests uSection MPC Tests parentSection C D - R O M D R I V E T E S T S About the Information Reported by Your System The CD-ROM Drive Letter is the letter that DOS has assigned the CD-ROM drive containing the MPC Wizard. SMARTDrive is a disk caching program from Microsoft that comes with MS-DOS and with Windows. SMARTDrive versions 5.0 and higher can be set to cache CD-ROM drives in addition to other types of drives. About the CD-ROM Drive Tests MSCDEX Version reports the version of the file MSCDEX.EXE you are currently using. MSCDEX.EXE allows the MS-DOS or PC-DOS operating systems (versions 3.1 or higher) to read CD-ROM discs. MSCDEX.EXE is sometimes referred to as the MS-DOS CD-ROM Extensions. For your computer to be MPC-compatible, it must be running version 2.2 or greater of these extensions. Data Transfer Rate Tests: 100%. This is the rate at which your drive reads data from a CD. Because your CPU (the "brains" of your computer) is allowed to devote all of its time to this test, the results are "best-case." Given 100% of the CPU, Level 1 drives must transfer 150 kilobytes per second or greater. Level 2-compatible drives must transfer 300 kilobytes per second or greater. In this and the other data transfer rate tests, the data is read in 16-kilobyte sequential chunks. Data Transfer Rate Tests: 60% & 40%. These tests are similar to the previous one, except that they force your CPU to devote only part of its time to reading data from the CD. The 40% button allows your CPU to spend forty percent of its time reading data from the CD. In order for your CD-ROM drive to be Level 1 MPC-compatible, it should read at least 150 kilobytes of data per second directly from a CD for a sustained period of time while using 40% of your CPU's time. Drives with a significantly lower rate than 150 kilobytes/second will probably cause sound, motion video, and animation to "break up" when you play such files directly off of a CD. The 60% button allows your CPU to spend sixty percent of its time reading data from the CD. Level 2 MPC specifications require that your CD-ROM drive be able to read data at a sustained rate of 300 kilobytes per second. They recommend (but do not require) that the drive do this using a maximum of 60% of the CPU's time. Average 1/3-Stroke Access Time. MPC Level 1 specifications state that a CD-ROM drive must have an average seek time of 1000 milliseconds (1 second) or less. The standard for MPC Level 2 is 400 milliseconds or less. A drive's access time is the time it takes the read head to move to a specific location on the CD and read the data there. In general, the lower the access time, the faster the drive. You may have noticed that while the MPC specs refer to seek time, the MPC Wizard test measures access time. That's because it's impossible for a single, generic test to measure the seek time of all the makes and models of CD-ROM drives on the market. The phrases "seek time" and "access time" sound similar, and are sometimes used interchangeably. However, technically they refer to slightly different measurements. These different measurements reflect different phases of disc access. Seek time is the time it takes for a drive's laser head to move to the proper track on the CD. Once the laser head is at the appropriate track, it takes time for the disc to rotate until the correct data is under the laser head. This time is called the latency. Once the correct data is under the read head, it takes time to read the data from the disc. This time is called the transmission time. Access time is the sum of the seek time, latency, and the transmission time. MSCDEX.EXE, the standard software interface that lets DOS and Windows programs "talk" to the CD-ROM drive, does not provide a way for a generic testing program to separate out seek time from latency and transmission time. The only way to obtain the seek time for every model of CD-ROM on the market would be to run a specially-designed test on each. Therefore, any generic test that claims to measure seek time actually measures access time. Access time is slightly higher than seek time. However, because latency and transmission time are tiny compared to the seek time, access time tests and seek time tests yield very similar results. The 1/3-stroke access test is the traditional access test for disk drives. The test performs a series of seeks, each of which is equivalent to 1/3 the distance across a sixty minute CD. At the end of the test the seek times are averaged. Please note: Test results are approximate. The faster your drive, the shorter the tests. Slow drives may take several minutes to perform one or more tests. Your mouse cursor is hidden while a test is performed. Click the appropriate button below to run a test. Click the Troubleshooting Tips button at the bottom right of your screen if your drive doesn't perform adequately.ly. page 10of 8 Click a button below to see how much data your CD-ROM drive can read per second in Windows, at a given percent of CPU time. statusBarText Data Transfer Rate TestsE .&+ +E .&+ +E runCDtest withSD withoutSD withSmartDrive buttonClick tranRate100 Click this button to see how much data your CD-ROM drive can read each second in Windows, given 100% of your CPU's time. statusBarText &100% tranRate60 Click this button to see how much data your CD-ROM drive can read each second in Windows, given 60% of your CPU's time. statusBarText tranRate40 Click this button to see how much data your CD-ROM drive can read each second in Windows, given 40% of your CPU's time. statusBarText bottomLine topLine withSmartDrive your CD-ROM drive during the data transfer rate tests. checkbox to prevent SmartDrive from caching your CD-ROM drive Click this svCDdrive isn't available because SmartDrive isn't set to cache CD-ROM drive checkbox to let SmartDrive cache wizardStatusBar during the data transfer rate tests. This feature mouseEnter buttonClick With &SMARTDrive .&+ +E .&+ +E krunMscdexTest buttonClick Click this button to find out which version of the MS-DOS CD-ROM Extensions (MSCDEX) is installed on your system. statusBarText MSCDEX &Version bottomLine topLine 3strokeAccessWithoutSD .&+ +E .&+ +E runCDtest buttonClick Click this button to see how fast your CD-ROM drive can access data from the CD in Windows. statusBarText Avg. &Access Time Test bottomLine topLine pstatusBarText wizardStatusBar mouseEnter Information about your CD-ROM drive reported by your system. See the informational text above for a detailed explanation. statusBarText Information about your CD-ROM drive. See the informational text above for a detailed explanation. statusBarText Information Reported by Your System ur System CDEX:MSCDEX: CD-ROM Drive Letter: bottomLine topLine L-,383 report2 report3 SMARTdrive Version: SMARTdrive Set to Cache CD?: Yesssson: report1 ur System ur System CDEX:MSCDEX: CD-ROM Drive Letter: bottomLine topLine $2<8H8 report2 report3 SMARTdrive Version: SMARTdrive Set to Cache CD?: Yesssson: report1 CD-ROM Drive Tips nextPage enterPage B"nextPage" 1845,1065,9300,5700 mainTextBounds scrollAmt showGoBackButton MPC Tests uSection CD-ROM Drive Tests parentSection C D - R O M D R I V E T R O U B L E S H O O T I N G T I P S 8PROBLEM: Your drive isn't up to spec on one or more of the Data Transfer Rate tests. Possible Causes/Solutions: Your CD-ROM drive may not be MPC-compatible. This is likely if you purchased your drive prior to 1992. Check to see whether your CD-ROM drive's documentation states that it is MPC-compatible. Also check what the manufacturer claims is the data transfer rate and average access time for the drive. You might be using a program that caches the CD-ROM drive, such as Microsoft's SMARTDrive 5.0. SMARTDrive 5.0 or higher comes with MS-DOS 6.2 and later, and with Windows for Workgroups 3.11. Caching a CD-ROM drive can actually slow down its sustained data transfer rate. This is most likely to happen if less than 100 percent of the CPU is available for transferring data. For this reason, you may notice that the 40% and 60% Data Transfer Rate Tests report a higher transfer rate when SMARTDrive is disabled than when it is enabled. Caching a CD stores portions of the CD's data in RAM. This lets the computer retrieve that data much more quickly than it could if it had to access the disk again, because retrieving data from RAM is much, much faster than retrieving it from a CD. The process of caching takes time, but that time is far smaller than the amount of time it would have taken to access the disc. Since much of the computer code in the Windows operating system needs to be accessed again and again, caching the disk that is running Windows can noticeably speed up your system. However, when you're playing digital video (such as Video for Windows), you typically need to access the video data only once. In this situation, caching the disc that holds the video data consumes more time than not caching the data at all, because the overhead of caching is not compensated for by fewer disc accesses. To prevent SMARTDrive 5.0 or higher from caching your CD-ROM drive, do the following: 1. Use a text editor, such as Windows Notepad, to edit your AUTOEXEC.BAT file. 2. Locate the line that includes the SMARTDRV command. 3. At the end of that line, add a space, a forward slash, and the letter "U" (not case-sensitive). For example, the line in your AUTOEXEC.BAT might read: C:\DOS\SMARTDRV.EXE /U 4) Save the file and reboot your computer for this change to take effect. The /U switch tells SMARTDrive not to cache your CD-ROM drive, but it will allow SMARTDrive to continue to cache your hard disk. We have found in some cases that this change increases the sustained transfer rate by as much as 50 KB per second. If you use your CD-ROM drive primarily for playing digital video or other tasks that require a fast sustained transfer rate, you may want to leave the /U in your AUTOEXEC.BAT file. The CD-ROM driver software you are using may be inadequate or outdated. CD-ROM driver software usually comes with a drive or with a drive controller card. It is usually loaded automatically in the CONFIG.SYS file. A CD-ROM drive that is mechanically capable of meeting or exceeding MPC specifications may nonetheless perform poorly because of an inadequate or old driver. Several manufacturers have issued updated drivers for their CD-ROM drives. Some are contained on this CD. Click the Find a Driver button on the left, then click the CD-ROM Drivers button to see if a driver for your drive is included. If not, contact the manufacturer of your drive for information on how you can obtain an updated driver. You may have an old version of MSCDEX.EXE. MSCDEX.EXE allows the MS-DOS or PC-DOS operating systems (versions 3.1 or higher) to read CD-ROMs, and is referred to as the MS-DOS CD-ROM Extensions. You must be using MSCDEX.EXE version 2.2 or greater. If you are running Windows 3.1 or greater, then you should be using MSCDEX.EXE Version 2.21 or greater. The CD-ROM Tests screen reports the version you are currently using. MSCDEX.EXE files that have a file date before February, 1992 are older than version 2.21. To update your version, contact your drive manufacturer. MSCDEX.EXE is included with versions 6.0 or greater of MS-DOS. If you are using any of these versions, you should only use the version of MSCDEX that came with your MS-DOS. For instance, do not use MSCDEX version 2.21 with MS-DOS 6.0, or MSCDEX version 2.22 with MS-DOS 6.2. In addition, do not use a version of MSCDEX greater than 2.21 with a version of MS-DOS lower than 6.0. You are using MSCDEX.EXE version 2.2 or greater and you have the statement device=LANMAN10.386 in the [386Enh] section of your SYSTEM.INI file. Remove the statement. It is only needed with versions of MSCDEX.EXE earlier than 2.2. The buffer for your CD-ROM drive may be insufficient. When loading the file MSCDEX.EXE, increase its /M: parameter. The higher the number, the larger the buffer (and the more memory you use up). Usually a number between 12 and 20 is sufficient. Since you probably load MSCDEX.EXE automatically from your AUTOEXEC.BAT file, go into AUTOEXEC.BAT with a text editor (like Notepad ) and make the change. If there is no /M: parameter, you can add one. Make sure you type /M: and then the number of buffers you want, with no spaces between any of the characters. You must place this parameter after the filename MSCDEX.EXE, with at least one space after the filename, as in the following example: C:\DOS\MSCDEX /D:MSCD001 /M:12 After editing the /M: parameter, you must reboot your computer for the change to take effect. If you want to configure your system for optimum performance you can try setting /M: to zero, rebooting, and testing your transfer rate. Then try setting /M: to 10, rebooting, and running the test again. Repeat this process until you pinpoint the number of buffers that gives the optimum performance for your system. We have found that the optimum number differs from system to system. Your CD-ROM controller device may be inadequate. CD-ROM drives are typically connected to desktop PCs through a SCSI device, sound device, IDE interface, or proprietary card supplied by the drive manufacturer. CD-ROM drives are typically connected to laptop PCs through either a parallel or PCMCIA interface. The quality of these interfaces can have a significant impact on the performance of your CD-ROM drive. Unfortunately, there is probably no solution to the problem of an inadequate controller card except to replace it with a better one. Note however that if your controller card is proprietary, you may not even have this option. In all cases, if you suspect your controller card, call your drive or computer dealer to enquire about possible replacements or ROM updates before you purchase a new card. Your MPC Wizard CD may be dirty or damaged. Examine the side of the disc that has no printing on it. If it is dirty, clean it and try the tests again. You can also try using another CD-ROM with the data transfer rate tests only (the access time test requires the MPC Wizard CD). To ensure that test results are accurate, make sure the disc you choose has at least 500 MB of data on it. The lens in your CD-ROM drive that reads the CD may be dirty. Try using a CD lens cleaner to clean the lens. A CD lens cleaner is usually a CD with a little brush on the bottom of it that brushes off the lens as the CD spins inside the drive. The same lens cleaners are used for CD-ROM drives and audio CD players, and you can usually find a CD lens cleaner at stores that sell electronic or stereo equipment. Some other hardware or software component of your system may be tying up the resources of your system during the test. For instance, if you have a modem or fax that is set to auto receive while the test is running, it may be taking CPU time away from the test and causing some decrease in performance. Windows is a complex, multitasking operating system. It is impossible (and not even desirable) to totally halt all other tasks that may be going on in Windows while the test is running. Your CD-ROM drive may be defective. Contact the retailer who sold it to you. PROBLEM: Your reported access time differs from the published specs for your CD-ROM drive, or your access time doesn't meet the MPC specs. Possible Causes/Solutions: If you compare the CD-ROM drive specifications published by different manufacturers, you will notice that different manufacturers often use different phrases to refer to the time needed for the laser pickup to move to a specific location on the CD. Some of the phrases used to describe such tests include 1/3-stroke access time, 1/3-stroke seek time, access time, average access time, average full stroke access time, average random access time, average seek time, full stroke seek time, maximum average access time, and seek time! Occasionally a manufacturer will publish more than one type of measurement for its drive. Many consumers get confused by these similar-sounding names. The truth is that these phrases often refer to different measurements. Because different manufacturers publish numbers based on different measurements, it is often inappropriate to compare these numbers. The Wizard runs the same access time test on every drive, so we suggest running it on several computers, then comparing the results to each other. This will ensure that you are comparing "apples (so to speak) with apples." It is also important to consider that your CD-ROM drive manufacturer may have derived the specifications it published by testing brand new drives under ideal conditions. If this is the case, it is not surprising for your test results to vary from the manufacturer's claims. Also, different manufacturing runs of the same CD can vary in their readability, mostly due to how well the CD reflects the light from the laser read head. Therefore, tests run with different CDs that have the same data on them can produce slightly different results. Remember, too, that the MPC Wizard tests are run from within Windows. CD tests run in DOS might report faster performance than the Wizard tests, because DOS-based test results don't reflect any of the overhead of running Windows. We feel it is appropriate to test drive performance while Windows is running because MPC-compatible applications must run in Windows. Your CD-ROM drive may not be MPC-compatible. This is likely if you purchased your drive prior to 1992. Check to see whether your CD-ROM drive's documentation states that it is MPC-compatible. Also check what the manufacturer claims is the data transfer rate and average access time for the drive. The CD-ROM driver software you are using may be inadequate or outdated. See the above discussion of CD-ROM driver software. You may have an old version of MSCDEX.EXE. See the above discussion of MSCDEX.EXE. You are using MSCDEX.EXE version 2.2 or greater and you have the statement device=LANMAN10.386 in the [386Enh] section of your SYSTEM.INI file. Remove the statement. It is only needed with versions of MSCDEX.EXE earlier than 2.2. Your CD-ROM controller card may be inadequate. See the above discussion of controller cards. Your MPC Wizard CD may be dirty or damaged. Examine the side of the disc that has no printing on it. If it is dirty, clean it and try the tests again. The lens in your CD-ROM drive that reads the CD may be dirty. Try using a CD lens cleaner to clean the lens. A CD lens cleaner is usually a CD with a little brush on the bottom of the CD that brushes off the lens as the CD spins inside the drive. The same lens cleaners are used for CD-ROM drives and audio CD players, and you can usually find a CD lens cleaner at stores that sell electronic or stereo equipment. Some other hardware or software component of your system may be tying up the resources of your system during the test. For instance, if you have a modem or fax that is set to auto receive while the test is running, it may be taking CPU time away from the test and causing some decrease in performance. Windows is a complex, multitasking operating system. It is impossible (and not even desirable) to totally halt all other tasks that may be going on in Windows while the test is running. Your CD-ROM drive may be defective. Contact the retailer who sold it to you. PROBLEM: The CD-ROM tests never end! Possible Causes/Solutions: "Old," non-MPC-compatible CD-ROM drives (typically those made prior to 1992) often have very slow seek times and transfer rates, making the tests seem interminable. You have an old or bad copy of either MSCDEX.EXE or your CD-ROM driver. See the discussion of MSCDEX.EXE and CD-ROM drivers above. The lens in your CD-ROM drive that reads the CD may be dirty. See the discussion of lens cleaners above. PROBLEM: The MPC Wizard is unable to complete one or more tests, or the 1/3-Stoke Access Test reports an unrealistically fast rating of 100 milliseconds or less. Possible Causes/Solutions: You might be running a program that is caching the CD-ROM drive and interfering with the test. If you are running Microsoft's SMARTDrive 5.0 or higher, the Wizard attempts to temporarily disable SMARTDrive while it runs the 1/3-Stroke Access Test. However, there are other caching programs on the market that the Wizard cannot detect, and therefore cannot temporarily disable. If you have such a program, try disabling it before running the Access Test. Consult the documentation for your caching program to learn how to do this. You can re-enable the cache program when you're done using the Wizard to test your access time. You may be wondering whether it would be useful to measure the access time of your drive while the cache is enabled. It would not be useful because an access time test tries to measure seeks by obtaining a large sample size, whereas a cache tries to limit CD accesses. Caching the data does not allow the drive to access the disc any faster, it simply reduces the number of disc accesses. A file or files that the MPC Wizard needs is damaged, or has been removed from the program's hard disk directory. Run the MPC Wizard SETUP.EXE program again from the CD and accept the default installation. Your CD-ROM drive may not be installed correctly. Check the appropriate manuals that came with your system. Your CD-ROM drive may be defective. Contact the retailer who sold it to you. To go back to the previous screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen.n. page 14of 6 graphics tests enterPage ---------------------- TEST: COLOR CAPABILITY ---------------------- Date: Time: REQUIREMENTS FOR MPC-COMPATIBILITY Minimum Simultaneous Colors: 16 Recommended Minimum: 256 YOUR SYSTEM'S RESULTS Maximum Simultaneous Colors: ******************************************************** pColorText 1845,1065,9300,4250 mainTextBounds scrollAmt showGoBackButton showTipsButton MPC Tests uSection MPC Tests parentSection G R A P H I C S T E S T S About the Graphics Tests Color Capability and Display Resolution Tests Level 1 MPC specifications require a minimum screen resolution of 640 x 480 pixels and 16 simultaneous colors. 256 simultaneous colors at the same resolution is recommended. Many multimedia titles on the market (and all of SoftKey's MediaClips programs) were meant to be viewed with a graphics display driver capable of displaying at least 256 simultaneous colors. Level 2 MPC specifications require 640 x 480 pixels and 65,536 simultaneous colors. Even though your computer system may be capable of displaying more than 16 colors, the Windows display driver software that you're using may not be taking advantage of this capability. The Color Capability Test button will tell you how many colors you can display on your screen simultaneously with your currently installed video driver. The Display Resolution Test button will tell you the how many pixels are displayed on the screen by your currently installed video driver. Bitmap Display Speed Tests To display synchronized audio-visual presentations, an MPC must be able to draw bitmapped graphics on your computer screen fairly rapidly. As a result, MPC Level 1 specs recommend that your VGA adapter be able to draw 1, 4, and 8 bit-per-pixel DIBs (Device Independent Bitmaps) on your monitor at a rate of at least 358,400 (350 K) pixels per second, using 100% of the CPU time. Level 1 specs also recommend that your MPC be able to draw 143,360 (140 K) pixels per second on your screen, given 40% of CPU time. MPC Level 2 specs are considerably more stringent. They recommend that your VGA adapter be able to draw 1, 4, and 8 bit-per-pixel DIBs at a rate of least 1,258,292 (1.2 M) pixels per second, using 40% of the CPU time. This recommendation was intended to ensure that the MPC was capable of meeting the demands of higher-end multimedia programs. In particular, it was intended that the MPC be able to play video at 320 X 240 resolution, in 256 colors, at 15 frames per second. (In case you don't have a calculator handy, 320 X 240 X 15 = 1,152,000 pixels per second.) There are several methods that Windows programs use to draw graphics on the screen. These methods have the names BitBlt, StretchBlt, DrawDib, and (a recent addition) Win/G. The MPC Wizard uses the DrawDib method to test bitmap display speed because DrawDib was created with multimedia in mind. It is, for instance, the method used by Microsoft's Video for Windows to display images. The test loads eighteen 1-bit, 4-bit, or 8-bit images into RAM, then measures how fast it can draw the images given either 40% or 100% of the CPU time. Choose the bit depth and percentage of CPU time of the test by clicking the appropriate radio buttons below. Then click the Run Bitmap Display Test button. If you encounter a problem, click the troubleshooting tips button at the bottom right of your screen. To go back to the previous screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen..een.n.. page 1 of 2 Click this radio button to run the Bitmap Display Speed Test while using 100% of your CPU's time. statusBarText 1&00% Click this radio button to run the Bitmap Display Speed Test while using 40% of your CPU's time. statusBarText Click this radio button to display 8-bit (256-color) bitmapped images during the Bitmap Display Speed Test. statusBarText &8-bit Click this radio button to display 4-bit (16-color) bitmapped images during the Bitmap Display Speed Test. statusBarText 4-b&it Click this radio button to display 1-bit (2-color) bitmapped images during the Bitmap Display Speed Test. statusBarText &1-bit playCD .&+ +E w, #> w, #> .&+ +E drawDib linkBlttest cbitDepth BLTTEST.DLL runDrawDibTest percentCpu wnoVFWdll noPalette buttonClick 08Bit bitDepth percentCpu After selecting the percent of CPU time and color depth that you want, click this button to run the Bitmap Display Speed Test. statusBarText Run &Bitmap Display Test bottomLine topLine Test your system's ability to display bitmapped images, using a method similiar to the one used by Video for Windows movies. statusBarText Bitmap Display Speed Testsss Click a radio button below to choose the color depth of the bitmapped images displayed during the Bitmap Display Speed Test. statusBarText Color Depth bottomLine topLine Click a radio button below to choose the percent of CPU time to take up while running the Bitmap Display Speed Test. statusBarText CPU Time bottomLine topLine colorTest .&+ +E .&+ +E waveAudio runWaveAudioTest waveType buttonClick waveType After you've chosen a sample rate, sample size, and output, click this button to play your choice. statusBarText &Play Wave File copying Copying the test file. Please wait... bottomLine topLine Click a radio button below to choose the output of the audio file played during the Wave Audio Test. statusBarText Output bottomLine topLine See how well your system plays wave files in Windows. Choose a sample rate, size, and output, then click Play Wave File. statusBarText Wave Audio TestsWave Audio Tests-+ Click a radio button below to choose the sample size of the wave audio file played during the Wave Audio Test. statusBarText Sample Size Click a radio button below to choose the sample rate of the wave audio file played during the Wave Audio Test. statusBarText Sample Rate pstatusBarText wizardStatusBar mouseEnter Wave audio-related information provided by your system. See the text above for a detailed explanation. statusBarText Information Reported by Your System ur System CDEX:MSCDEX: report1 report2 Product Name: Driver Version: bottomLine topLine speakerTest wdlgBoxGetValue buttonClick Click this button to see if your left and right speakers are placed correctly, and properly balanced. statusBarText Sp&eaker Tests... bottomLine topLine bottomLine topLine bottomLine topLine topLine bottomLine topLine bottomLine topLine CD Audio Tests #6%&( 23,27 selectChars 1845,1065,9300,4020 mainTextBounds scrollAmt showGoBackButton showTipsButton MPC Tests uSection Sound Tests parentSection C D A U D I O T E S T S About CD Audio MPC Marketing Council specifications require all CD-ROM drives to play Red Book CD audio in addition to reading computer data. This means that with the right program (like Media Player, which comes with Windows 3.1), you should be able to pop your favorite music CD into your CD-ROM drive and play it from inside Windows. Some computer programs issued on CD-ROM use CD audio to add narration or music. But when you put a mixed-mode CD into your CD-ROM drive and look at its file directory (perhaps through the Windows File Manager), you won't see any sign of the CD audio tracks. That's because they're not computer files. The sound quality of CD audio tracks on a mixed-mode CD is usually the same as your typical music CD--in other words, quite good. Each track contains two channels of information, usually referred to as the right and left channels. Multimedia publishers can use these tracks in two ways. They can use them to provide stereo sound, or they can store completely different audio information on each of them. MPC specs require an output jack and volume control on the front panel of every MPC-compatible CD-ROM drive. This enables you to plug a set of headphones into your CD-ROM player--perhaps to enjoy some Bach while you're word processing at 2 a.m. In order for you to hear CD audio through the same speakers that play your wave and MIDI audio, your CD-ROM device must be wired to your sound device. An MPC sound device should allow you to mix the CD audio signal with wave and MIDI audio signals, adjust the relative volumes of each of these types of sound, and direct the output to a single stereo output jack at the back of your computer. You plug one end of a stereo cable into the jack, the other end into your amplifier and speaker system, and enjoy. About the Information Reported by Your System The CD-ROM Drive Letter is the letter that DOS has assigned the CD-ROM drive containing the MPC Wizard. The CD Audio Device Name is the name that Windows assigned to the CD-ROM drive containing the Wizard CD when you first installed the [MCI] CD Audio driver for that drive. MCI stands for Media Control Interface. Through MCI, Windows provides a standard way for programs to easily control various types of media like CD audio, wave audio, MIDI audio, digital video, videodiscs, etc. [MCI] CD Audio is installed via the Windows Control Panel. About the CD Audio Tests Click a button inside the Audio Output box to select the CD audio channels you wish to test. Click Stereo to choose both channels of a stereo CD audio track on the Wizard CD. If your MPC is connected to a stereo system, when you play this track you should clearly hear the stereo effect resulting from two distinct channels of audio information. The left channel should come through your left speaker, and the right channel should come through your right speaker. Click Mono to choose a CD audio track recorded in mono (i.e., the same information sent to the left and right channels). When listening to the mono track, it should sound as if the person who is speaking is doing so from a point midway between both of your speakers. If this is not the case, adjust the balance control on your MPC mixer or (if available) the volume controls on your speakers. Click Left Channel Only to choose only the left channel of the CD audio track recorded in stereo. Click Right Channel Only to choose only the right channel of the CD audio track recorded in stereo. Note that some CD-ROM players or audio mixers, when instructed to play one channel only, will send that channel through both of your speakers. Other CD-ROM players or audio mixers will play the left channel only through the left speaker, and the right channel only through the right speaker. Click Play CD Audio Track to hear the appropriate CD audio recording on the MPC Wizard CD. If you encounter a problem, click the troubleshooting tips button at the bottom right of your screen. To go back to the previous screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen..right of your screen. page 10of 8 Choose the type of audio output you'd like to hear by clicking one of the radio buttons below. statusBarText Audio Output stereo Click this radio button to choose a CD audio track recorded in stereo (i.e., different information sent to the left and right channels). statusBarText &Stereo Click this radio button to choose a CD audio track recorded in mono (i.e., the same information sent to the left and right channels). statusBarText M&ono Click this radio button to choose only the left channel of a CD audio track recorded in stereo. statusBarText &Left Channel Only right Click this radio button to choose only the right channel of a CD audio track recorded in stereo. statusBarText Right C&hannel Only playCD report stereo right runCDaudioTest buttonClick onClick lsType B"mono" -- Play file (track 3). 6 = " B"stereo" -- channels. j = " S" -- ethru , only. " -- runCDaudioTest ( "report"), After you've chosen the type of audio output you'd like to hear, click this button to play your choice. statusBarText &Play CD Audio Track pstatusBarText wizardStatusBar mouseEnter "wizardStatusBar" /= statusBarText CD audio-related information provided by your system. See the text above for a detailed explanation. statusBarText CD-ROM Drive Letter: CD Audio Device Name: report f":"c" Information Reported by Your System: See if your system can play CD audio in Windows. Choose the type of audio output you want, then click Play CD Audio Track. statusBarText CD Audio Teststs bottomLine topLine Motion Video Tests go Video for Windows Tests enterPage Video Windows Tests" showGoBackButton 1845,1065,9300,4250 mainTextBounds scrollAmt MPC Tests uSection MPC Tests parentSection M O T I O N V I D E O T E S T S The arrival of powerful CPUs at affordable prices made it possible to play digitally-recorded movies inside of Windows. The arrival of affordable CD-ROM technology--with its 600+ megabytes of file storage space--provided a platform to mass distribute these movies. The MPC Wizard lets you test your system's ability to play two types of digital motion video technology. Choose the type of motion video tests you want to perform: Click the Video for Windows Tests button to see whether your system can play back digital motion video files in Microsoft's Video for Windows format. Three compression/decompression methods are supported: Microsoft Video 1, Intel Indeo , and Cinepak Click the MPEG Video Tests button to see whether your system supports playback of MPEG motion video. Unlike Video for Windows, MPEG playback currently requires extra hardware not included in the MPC Level 1 or Level 2 specifications. To go back to the previous screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen..ur screen... page 1 of 8 go Video for Windows Tests Click this button to go to the Video for Windows Tests screen. statusBarText &Video for Windows Tests go MPEG Video Tests Click this button to go to the MPEG Motion Video Tests screen. statusBarText M&PEG Video Tests bottomLine topLine MIDI Audio Tests svMidiEnteredBefore svPatchNum pLastKeyNum svKeyNum YpLastPatchNum playSound enterPage svPatchNum YpLastPatchNum pLastKeyNum svKeyNum leavePage b"X#,/P1P1 {Piano,Acoustic Grand Piano,Bright Acoustic Piano,Electric Grand Piano,Honky-Tonk Piano,Rhodes Piano,Chorused Piano,Harpsichord,Clavinet,},{Chromatic Percussion,Celesta,Glockenspiel,Music Box,Vibraphone,Marimba,Xylophone,Tubular Bells,Dulcimer,},{Organ,Hammond Organ,Percussive Organ,Rock Organ,Church Organ,Reed Organ,Accordion,Harmonica,Tango Accordion,},{Guitar,Acoustic Guitar (nylon),Acoustic Guitar (steel),Electric Guitar (jazz),Electric Guitar (clean),Electric Guitar (muted),Overdriven Guitar,Distortion Guitar,Guitar Harmonics,},{Bass,Acoustic Bass,Electric Bass (finger),Electric Bass (pick),Fretless Bass,Slap Bass 1,Slap Bass 2,Synth Bass 1,Synth Bass 2,},{Strings,Violin,Viola,Cello,Contrabass,Tremolo Strings,Pizzicato Strings,Orchestral Harp,Timpani,},{Ensemble,String Ensemble 1,String Ensemble 2,SynthStrings 1,SynthStrings 2,Choir Aahs,Voice Oohs,Synth Voice,Orchestra Hit,},{Brass,Trumpet,Trombone,Tuba,Muted Trumpet,French Horn,Brass Section,Synth Brass 1,Synth Brass 2,},{Reed,Soprano Sax,Alto Sax,Tenor Sax,Baritone Sax,Oboe,English Horn,Bassoon,Clarinet,},{Pipe,Piccolo,Flute,Recorder,Pan Flute,Bottle Blow,Shakuhachi,Whistle,Ocarina,},{Synth Lead,Lead 1 (square),Lead 2 (sawtooth),Lead 3 (caliope lead),Lead 4 (chiff lead),Lead 5 (charang),Lead 6 (voice),Lead 7 (fifths),Lead 8 (bass + lead),},{Synth Pad,Pad 1 (new age),Pad 2 (warm),Pad 3 (polysynth),Pad 4 (choir),Pad 5 (bowed),Pad 6 (metallic),Pad 7 (halo),Pad 8 (sweep),},{Synth Effects,FX 1 (rain),FX 2 (soundtrack),FX 3 (crystal),FX 4 (atmosphere),FX 5 (brightness),FX 6 (goblins),FX 7 (echoes),FX 8 (sci-fi),},{Ethnic,Sitar,Banjo,Shamisen,Koto,Kalimba,Bagpipe,Fiddle,Shanai,},{Percussive,Tinkle Bell,Agogo,Steel Drums,Woodblock,Taiko Drum,Melodic Tom,Synth Drum,Reverse Cymbal,},{Sound Effects,Guitar Fret Noise,Breath Noise,Seashore,Bird Tweet,Telephone Ring,Helicopter,Applause,Gunshot pPatchAssignments Piano,Chromatic Percussion,Organ,Guitar,Bass,Strings,Ensemble,Brass,Reed,Pipe,Synth Lead,Synth Pad,Synth Effects,Ethnic,Percussive,Sound Effects pPatchCategories Supports Volume Control,Separate Left-Right Volume Control,,Supports Patch Caching pSupport MIDI Hardware Output Port,Generic Internal Synthesizer,Square Wave Internal Synthesizer,FM Internal Synthesizer,MIDI Mapper pTechnology pLastPatchNum {Trap Set Drums,Acoustic Bass Drum,Acoustic Snare,Bass Drum 1,Electric Snare,High Floor Tom,High Tom,High-Mid Tom,Low Floor Tom,Low Tom,Low-Mid Tom,Side Stick,},{Trap Set Cymbals,Chinese Cymbal,Closed High-Hat,Crash Cymbal 1,Crash Cymbal 2,Open High Hat,Pedal High Hat,Ride Bell,Ride Cymbal 1,Ride Cymbal 2,Splash Cymbal,},{Standard Percussion,Cowbell,Hand Clap,High Wood Block,Low Wood Block,Mute Triangle,Open Triangle,Tambourine,Vibraslap,},{Latin Drums,High Bongo,High Timbale,Low Bongo,Low Conga,Low Timbale,Mute High Conga,Open High Conga,},{Latin Percussion,Cabasa,Claves,High Agogo,Long Guiro,Long Whistle,Low Agogo,Maracas,Mute Cuica,Open Cuica,Short Guiro,Short Whistle pKeyMenuList Acoustic Bass Drum,Bass Drum 1,Side Stick,Acoustic Snare,Hand Clap,Electric Snare,Low Floor Tom,Closed High-Hat,High Floor Tom,Pedal High Hat,Low Tom,Open High Hat,Low-Mid Tom,High-Mid Tom,Crash Cymbal 1,High Tom,Ride Cymbal 1,Chinese Cymbal,Ride Bell,Tambourine,Splash Cymbal,Cowbell,Crash Cymbal 2,Vibraslap,Ride Cymbal 2,High Bongo,Low Bongo,Mute High Conga,Open High Conga,Low Conga,High Timbale,Low Timbale,High Agogo,Low Agogo,Cabasa,Maracas,Short Whistle,Long Whistle,Short Guiro,Long Guiro,Claves,High Wood Block,Low Wood Block,Mute Cuica,Open Cuica,Mute Triangle,Open Triangle pKeyAssignments pLastKeyNum showGoBackButton showTipsButton 1845,1065,9300,4250 mainTextBounds scrollAmt MPC Tests uSection Sound Tests parentSection M I D I A U D I O T E S T S About MIDI Sound MIDI is a standard computer language for electronic music synthesizers. It stands for Musical Instrument Digital Interface. Storing the musical instructions for a piece of music in a MIDI file has some important advantages over storing an actual recording of that music in a wave audio file or CD audio track. One advantage is that a MIDI file produced one day can be easily modified at a later date with the appropriate MIDI sequencer software. Another advantage, for both musicians and their audiences, is the small amount of disk space that MIDI files take up compared with digitally-recorded music like wave or CD audio. MPC specifications require that every MPC be equipped with an internal music synthesizer (also called a sequencer), which is usually an integrated part of the sound device. This synthesizer must be able to play back MIDI files authored according to a standard published by Microsoft. The standard, among other things, defines 128 musical instruments and 47 percussion instruments that every MIDI sequencer should try to support. This means, for example, that if a MIDI author writes a string quartet, every MPC should play that MIDI file using sounds designated as stringed--and not brass--instruments. Instrument designations are based on the General MIDI Mode specification issued by the MIDI Manufacturers Association. Where support for all of these instruments is not feasible, a synthesizer manufacturer should support at least one instrument from each of the sixteen "groups" of instruments detailed in the General MIDI Patch Assignments of the General MIDI Mode spec. The synthesizer manufacturer can support these instruments and other requirements either at the hardware level, or by supplying its own "MIDI map" file that can be read by the MIDI Mapper included in Windows 3.1 or later. About the MIDI Audio Tests The MIDI audio tests let you know not only whether the MIDI sequencer portion of your MPC is working, but how good it is. The MPC Wizard CD contains a MIDI file that spans a four-octave range. By clicking the Select New Sound button in the Melodic Sounds & Sound Effects box, you can assign that MIDI file to any of the 128 standard musical instruments supported by your MPC. Instruments with a wide range (like pianos) will probably play all four octaves well. Instruments with a more limited range will be low or silent during one or more parts of the piece. Synthesizers will vary in their ability to faithfully reproduce the 128 standard instruments. When you've selected the instrument you want to hear, its name will appear in the box. Click the Play Sound button to play the MIDI file. You can also sample how well your MIDI sequencer reproduces the 47 percussive instruments by clicking the Select New Sound button in the Percussive Sounds box. When you've selected the instrument you want to hear, its name will appear in the box. Click the Play Sound button to play a short percussive sound. If you encounter a problem, click the troubleshooting tips button at the bottom right of your screen. To go back to the previous screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen.)" page 1 of 6 testingMIDI Testing your MIDI audio playback. Playing a MIDI file. Press Esc to abort test.U# Try playing MIDI melodic sounds & sound effects in Windows. Click Select a New Sound to choose a sound, then click Play Sound. statusBarText Melodic Sounds & Sound Effectss bottomLine topLine patches This is the melodic sound or sound effect that will play when you click the Play Sound button below. statusBarText Sound: Acoustic Grand Pianoo X#$(B* playSound .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E For your convenience, you will not see the Test Results Played svPatchNum false svMelodicMidiTested hplayMidi midiAudioMelodic this screen. dialog box again this session when you play melodic MIDI sounds from buttonClick Click this button to play the melodic sound or sound effect appearing in the above text box. statusBarText &Play Sound 1, #> vMenuList svPatchNum patches Unable to change MIDI patch. vPatches will remain the chosen patch. !MpopMenu s pPatchAssignments Sound: buttonClick Click this button to select a new melodic sound or sound effect. Your choice will appear in the above text box. statusBarText &Select New Sound Try playing MIDI percussive sounds in Windows. Click Select a New Sound to choose a sound, then click Play Sound. statusBarText Percussive SoundssEffectsssects bottomLine topLine This is the percussive sound that will play when you click the Play Sound button below. statusBarText Sound: Acoustic Bass Drum .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E For your convenience, you will not see the Test Results Played false dialog box again this session when you play percussive MIDI sounds from hplayMidi svKeyNum midiAudioPercussive svPercussiveMidiTested this screen. buttonClick Click this button to play the percussive sound appearing in the above text box statusBarText P&lay Sound Click this button to select a new percussive sound. Your choice will appear in the above text box. statusBarText S&elect New Sound YpLastPatchNum playSound enterPage svPatchNum YpLastPatchNum pLastKeyNum svKeyNum leavePage 4svPatchNum,svKeyNum,svMidiEnteredBefore pLastPatchNum pLastKeyNum B"playSound" -- Store Jpatch & key numbers .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E For your convenience, you will not see the Test Results Played svPatchNum false svMelodicMidiTested hplayMidi midiAudioMelodic this screen. dialog box again this session when you play melodic MIDI sounds from buttonClick buttonClick 4svPatchNum, svMelodicMidiTested -- Decide whether Results box, Fpass playMidi msg: Zd = u"midiAudioMelodic", P) = "Played" "For your convenience, will xsee "dialog session melodic MIDI sounds " &&\ " screen." MPEG Video Tests fullScreen enterPage B"fullScreen" showGoBackButton showTipsButton 1845,1065,9300,4250 mainTextBounds scrollAmt MPC Tests uSection Motion Video Tests parentSection M P E G V I D E O T E S T S About MPEG Video MPEG (which stands for Motion Picture Experts Group) is a method of compressing and decompressing synchronized digital sound and video. It was developed by the International Standards Organization (ISO) and the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) as a universal standard suitable for all types of computers and other electronic equipment. Like Microsoft's Video for Windows (VFW) format, an MPEG movie on the PC is stored in a single, standard computer file. Unlike the VFW format, however, playing back an MPEG file currently requires hardware in addition to what is required under MPC Level 1 or Level 2 specifications. Playing MPEG movies through the Windows Media Control Interface (MCI) also requires the installation of an additional software driver (usually available from the MPEG device manufacturer). While it requires more equipment to play MPEG movies than software-only Video for Windows movies, the difference in quality between the two formats is dramatic. Though the sizes of MPEG and VFW files are similar, MPEG files recorded in 320 x 240 pixels play back at 30 frames per second directly off of a Level 1-compatible CD-ROM drive, with CD-quality stereo sound! What's more, MPEG devices like the ReelMagic board from Sigma Designs do a great job of stretching the image up to 1024 x 768 pixels. About the MPEG Video Tests The MPEG video tests let you play one sample movie in two sizes. Click the Play Video File (Full Screen) button to see how well your MPEG board plays the movie full-screen. Click the Play Video File (Small Screen) button to view the movie in its originally-recorded size. Press the Esc key to abort the test. If you encounter a problem, click the troubleshooting tips button at the bottom right of your screen. To go back to the previous screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen. page 1 of 3 fullScreen runMpegTest fullScreen buttonClick onClick runMpegTest "fullScreen", Click this button to play the MPEG motion video test file (recorded at 320 x 240 pixels) in full-screen mode. statusBarText Play Video &File (Full Screen) smallScreen runMpegTest buttonClick nClick runMpegTest "smallScreen", Click this button to play the MPEG video test file at its recorded size of 320 x 240 pixels. statusBarText Play Video File (Small &Screen) bottomLine topLine Wave Audio Tips nextPage enterPage B"nextPage" 1845,1065,9300,5700 mainTextBounds scrollAmt showGoBackButton MPC Tests uSection Wave Audio Tests parentSection W A V E A U D I O T R O U B L E S H O O T I N G T I P S CPROBLEM: You're able to play some wave files, but not others. Possible Causes/Solutions: Not all sound devices support all combinations of sample rates, sample sizes, and output. Many devices, for instance, can't play any 16-bit sound. Others can play 44kHz sound in mono, but not in stereo. PROBLEM: You get a message saying the wave audio file played, but you didn't hear anything. Possible Causes/Solutions: External speakers or headphones are not attached to your sound device's output port. Plug them in. The headphone jack on your CD-ROM drive is for CD audio sound only, so don't expect to hear wave audio sounds when you plug a pair of headphones in it. The volume control on your speakers is at 0. Some speakers have their own volume controls. Turn the volume up. The volume control on your sound device is at 0. Some sound boards have a volume control next to their output ports. Find the sound card in the back of your computer, find the volume control for output, and turn it up. Note that some cards also have a volume control to adjust the microphone or other input . That's not the control you want. The wave audio or master volume control in your sound mixer is at 0. MPC specifications require a sound mixer, which is usually provided by the sound device manufacturer as a stand-alone Windows program. A sound mixer allows you to control the relative volume of each MPC music source (i.e., wave audio, CD audio, microphone, and MIDI audio). A control is also provided to let you adjust the total volume from all sources. See if a mixer is installed on your system, or check for one on the disks that came with your sound device. Make sure that both volume controls in your mixer are up high enough. PROBLEM: Your wave audio device or device driver is not responding. Possible Causes/Solutions: You don't have an MPC-compatible sound device installed in your computer. A PC that conforms to MPC specifications must have a sound device. Check to see whether your sound device's documentation states that it is MPC-compatible and supports waveform audio (.WAV) playback. Microsoft makes available a driver called SPEAKER.DRV that plays back Windows system sounds through the PC's internal speaker without extra sound hardware. As of this writing, SPEAKER.DRV is not MPC-compatible and will not work with SoftKey's MediaClips products. Two or more devices installed on your system are using the same IRQ, DMA, or base I/O port settings in Windows. Peripheral devices attached to a PC (like graphics boards, sound boards, and mice) usually can't share any of these settings. Some devices allow changing these settings via software, while others require you to re-set jumpers on the board itself. Unfortunately, many programs designed to detect which of these settings are in use on your system only detect devices that are active at the time the program is running. We strongly recommend that you keep a list handy of the DMA, IRQ, and base I/O settings for each device on your system. This will help you avoid headaches the next time you attempt to install a new peripheral device. You must be particularly careful when setting sound devices, since many devices on the market use multiple IRQs, DMAs, or port I/O settings. For instance, one sound card on the market uses a special base I/O port for MIDI in addition to another, general one. In addition, some sound devices allow you to set different DMAs and IRQs for Windows and DOS. You never installed the Windows sound driver for your sound device, or you installed it incorrectly. A sound driver specifically for Windows and specifically for your brand of sound device must be installed. Installation procedures for these drivers vary from device to device. Check the documentation that came with your device for the name of the appropriate waveform sound driver. Note that this driver is different from one you may have installed for your DOS (non-Windows) programs. Check to see whether the driver is installed by running the Windows program called Control Panel. When Control Panel is running, double-click the Drivers icon. If a driver for your sound device is listed under Installed Drivers, then it's installed. If the driver is installed, you can usually examine the driver's settings by selecting it, then clicking the Setup button. This should bring up a dialog box showing settings for your sound device's IRQ, DMA, and/or base I/O port settings. See the instructions that came with your sound device to learn how to change them, if you find this necessary. For more information about IRQs, DMAs, and base I/O ports, see the above discussion. If the driver for your sound device is not listed, see if the MPC Wizard has the sound driver you need. To do so, click the Find a Driver button to the left, then click the Sound Drivers button. If the Wizard doesn't have a driver that is compatible with your sound device, you will need to obtain one. Sound drivers usually come with the sound device, so you should already have a disk that has the right one. If you don't, or if you need an updated driver, contact the maker or the seller of the device to see if they have one available. You have the wrong Windows sound driver installed, or both the right and the wrong drivers installed. Remove the incorrect driver via the Drivers section of the Windows Control Panel. Then, if need be, load the correct driver by following the documentation that came with your device. You can also see if the MPC Wizard has the sound driver you need. To do so, click the Find a Driver button to the left, then click the Sound Drivers button. You are running Windows in Standard Mode, and your Windows audio driver works only in 386 Enhanced Mode. Some drivers require that you run in the latter mode. Check your sound device's manual to see if this is the case with your driver. See your Windows manual for information about Standard and 386 Enhanced modes. PROBLEM: The MPC Wizard is unable to complete one or more tests. Possible Causes/Solutions: The [MCI] Sound driver may not be installed on your system, or may not be configured correctly. This generic driver must be installed in addition to the wave audio driver written specifically for your sound device. [MCI] Sound allows your sound device to work with the Windows multimedia interface known as MCI (Media Control Interface). Some Windows programs that incorporate sound don't use MCI, making it possible that you are able to hear some sounds in Windows (like system sounds) but not others (like the MPC Wizard's wave audio tests). To configure your sound device to work with MCI, follow these directions: 1) Run the Control Panel program (probably located in the Main program group of Program Manager). 2) Double-click the Drivers icon. 4) Examine the list of installed drivers. If it doesn't include [MCI] Sound, continue. 3) Click the Add button. 4) Scroll down the list of drivers, and click [MCI] Sound. 5) Click OK to install it. 6) You will be asked for the appropriate Windows disk that contains the driver, so have your original Windows disks handy. When prompted, insert the appropriate disk. 7) Shut down Windows and re-start it so the driver will load. After you've installed the [MCI] Sound driver, run the MPC Wizard and try the wave audio tests again. The statement wav=waveaudio is missing from the [mci extensions] section of your WIN.INI file. Use a text editor (such as Windows Notepad) to insert the statement on a new line. This statement tells Windows to use the waveform audio driver to play all files with a .wav extension. The statement WaveAudio=mciwave.drv is missing from the [mci] section of your SYSTEM.INI file. Use a text editor (such as Windows Notepad) to insert the statement on a new line. This line tells Windows that wave audio should be played using the MCI Waveform Driver MCIWAVE.DRV. At the end of this line there might be a space, then a number ranging from 2 to 9. This number represents the amount of memory that MCIWAVE.DRV will use for buffering audio data during playback or recording. By default, MCIWAVE.DRV will allocate enough memory for four seconds of audio. This parameter is set in the Drivers Control Panel under [MCI] Sound, which is discussed below. You are running one or more waveform sound programs that are conflicting with the wave audio tests. There are several programs on the market that allow Windows users to attach specific sounds to specific Windows events. If a sound is attached to opening a file, and a wave file is being opened by MCI, the attached sound may clobber the sound file being opened. Some of these sound-attaching programs are clever enough to know not to play the attached sound when a wave file is being opened by MCI. Others are not so clever. If you are currently running one of these programs and are experiencing problems with the wave tests, try disabling the feature in the other sound program that causes it to play a sound whenever a file is opened or closed. This should eliminate the problem. If it doesn't, try disabling the other sound program while you're running the Wizard. You can enable it again when you're finished using the Wizard. Two or more devices installed on your system are using the same IRQ, DMA, or base I/O port settings in Windows. See the above discussion of this topic. You are running Windows in Standard Mode, and your Windows audio driver works only in 386 Enhanced Mode. Some drivers require that you run in the latter mode. Check your sound device's manual to see if this is the case with your driver. See your Windows manual for information about Standard and 386 Enhanced modes. You may have a conflict involving SPEAKER.DRV. Microsoft makes available a driver called SPEAKER.DRV that plays back Windows system sounds through the PC's internal speaker without extra sound hardware. As of this writing, SPEAKER.DRV is not MPC-compatible and will NOT work with SoftKey MediaClips products. Some sound programs automatically install SPEAKER.DRV on your system if they fail to detect a sound device. This may have happened with your system if you installed such a program before you installed your sound device, or if your sound device was not set up correctly for use with Windows multimedia at the time you installed the program. To see whether SPEAKER.DRV is installed: 1) Run the Windows program called Control Panel. 2) Double-click the Drivers icon. 3) A list of currently-installed drivers will appear. If you see SPEAKER.DRV listed, continue. 4) Highlight the line that says SPEAKER.DRV and click the Remove button. 5) Re-start Windows, re-start the MPC Wizard, and try the wave audio tests again. One or more of the files that the MPC Wizard needs is damaged, or has been removed from the program's hard disk directory. Run the MPC Wizard SETUP.EXE program again from the CD and accept the default installation. Your CD-ROM drive may not be installed correctly. Check the appropriate manuals that came with your system. PROBLEM: The Speaker Tests have revealed that your left and right channels are reversed. Possible Causes/Solutions: You placed them incorrectly. Move the speaker currently on the left side to the right side, and move the speaker currently on the right side to the left side. PROBLEM: Even after adjusting your volume and balance controls, the speaker's voice in the mono wave Speaker Test doesn't sound like it's coming midway between your speakers, but instead sounds "dispersed." Possible Causes/Solutions: You have an "old" amplifier or "old" set of speakers, and your speakers are "out of phase." Two wires go to each speaker from the amplifier or sound device (though you may not be able to see this, because often the two wires are encased inside a single wrapping). Today's amplifiers are connected to today's speakers with wires that have jacks attached to both ends. These jacks prevent you from reversing the two wires that go to each speaker. Most old amplifiers and old speakers were not connected with wires that had jacks on them. This made it easy to reverse the wires. Reversed wires cause a set of stereo speakers to be out of phase. Speakers are out of phase when one speaker's cone is moving in at the same moment that the other speaker's cone is moving out. To correct the problem, reverse the two wires going to one of the speakers. But be sure you are reversing the wires that carry the sound! A speaker with a built-in amplifier usually also has a power cable that attaches to it. Do not reverse the speaker and power cables! SoftKey International Inc. assumes no responsibility or liability for any suggestions we make. You're on your own. If you don't know what you're doing, contact someone who does (but not us, please!). PROBLEM: The channels are reversed when you test your speakers with the CD Audio Tests, but not when you test your speakers with the the Speaker Tests. Possible Causes/Solutions: The cable that sends CD audio through your sound device is reversed. This cable usually has a jack with three or four pins on both ends. One end of the cable plugs into your CD-ROM drive, and the other end plugs into your sound device. Try reversing the plug on one end of the cable. Make sure that you're working with the cable that carries the sound, because there may be other cables also going from your CD-ROM drive to your sound device. PROBLEM: The channels are reversed when you test your speakers with the Speaker Tests, but not when you test your speakers with the the CD Audio Tests. Possible Causes/Solutions: You have two problems. First, the cable that sends CD audio through your sound device is reversed. This cable usually has a jack with three or four pins on both ends. One end of the cable plugs into your CD-ROM drive, and the other end plugs into your sound device. Try reversing the plug on one end of the cable. Make sure that you're working with the cable that carries the sound, because there may be other cables also going from your CD-ROM drive to your sound device. Second, your speakers are placed incorrectly. Move the speaker currently on the left side to the right side, and move the speaker currently on the right side to the left side. PROBLEM: Wave audio sounds break up or make a stuttering sound. Possible Causes/Solutions: The Windows sound driver you are using is inadequate or outdated. Several manufacturers have issued updated Windows drivers. Contact the manufacturer of your device for information. You can also see if the MPC Wizard has the sound driver you need. To do so, click the Find a Driver button to the left, and click the Sound Drivers button. The amount of buffer memory that Windows allots for playing waveform audio is insufficient. Try the following: 1) Run the Windows program called Control Panel. 2) Double-click the Drivers icon. 3) Select the [MCI] Sound driver. 4) Click the Setup button. 5) Increase the buffer size to a point where the problem disappears. Two or more devices installed on your system are using the same IRQ, DMA, or base I/O port settings in Windows. See the above discussion of IRQs, DMAs, and I/O settings. PROBLEM: Wave audio sound works fine in the MPC Wizard, but not in other programs. Possible Causes/Solutions: The other programs are playing MIDI or CD audio sounds--not wave sounds--and there is a problem with your setup for MIDI or CD audio. Run the CD Audio and MIDI tests to see whether this is true. PROBLEM: The quality of the sounds are poor. Possible Causes/Solutions: The sound will only be as good as the weakest link in your audio chain. If a device's maximum playback rate is 8-bit, 11.025 kHz, the sound will never be as good as a commercial CD audio recording even if your sound system is superb. If your sound board produces 16-bit, 44.1 kHz sound but your speakers are poor in quality, the sound will be poor. Poor-quality amplifiers will also produce poor sound even if the rest of the system is state-of-the-art. You have a sound device capable of using a 16-bit DMA, but it is not set up to do so. Using a 16-bit DMA will improve the sound quality of some devices. The 16-bit DMA settings are 4 through 7. The 8-bit DMA settings are 0 through 3. Some sound devices allow you to choose the DMA setting in the Drivers section of the Windows Control Panel. Others require you to set jumper switches on the sound card itself. See the manual that came with your sound device to see which case, if any, applies to you. Note that some PCs cannot use 16-bit DMA settings properly. If yours is one of them, you will have to be content with using an 8-bit DMA. Some sound devices or drivers that can't play a high-fidelity file the way it was recorded will instead play that file at a lower fidelity. For instance, if a sound device is not capable of playing 16-bit, 44kHz, stereo sounds, it may be designed to automatically play any file recorded in that format at 8-bit, 44kHz, stereo instead. To go back to the previous screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen. e previous screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen. screen. r screen. page 10of 155 MIDI Audio Tips nextPage enterPage B"nextPage" showGoBackButton 1845,1065,9300,5700 mainTextBounds scrollAmt MPC Tests uSection MIDI Audio Tests parentSection M I D I A U D I O T R O U B L E S H O O T I N G T I P S GPROBLEM: You get a message saying the MIDI audio file played, but you didn't hear anything. Possible Causes/Solutions: External speakers are not attached to your sound device's output port. Plug them in. The volume control on your speakers is set to 0. Some speakers have their own volume controls. Turn the volume up. The volume control on your sound device is set to 0. Some sound boards have a volume control next to their output ports. Find the sound card in the back of your computer, find the volume control for output, and turn it up. Note that some cards also have a volume control to adjust the microphone or other input. That's not the control you want. The MIDI sequencer or master volume control in your sound mixer is set to 0. MPC specifications require a sound mixer, which is usually provided by the sound device manufacturer as a stand-alone Windows program. A sound mixer allows you to control the relative volume of each MPC music source (e.g., wave audio, CD audio, microphone, and MIDI audio). A control is also provided to let you adjust the total volume from all sources. See if a mixer is installed on your system, or check for one on the disks that came with your sound device. Make sure that both volume controls in your mixer are set high enough. Your MIDI sequencer doesn't support the instrument(s) you're trying to play. MPC-compatible MIDI sequencers are only required to support one instrument from each musical group in the General MIDI patch assignments. To see a list of these groups, click the Select New Sound button in the Melodic Sounds & Sound Effects box. While sequencers must also be capable of playing two simultaneous percussive sounds, there is no mention of what these sounds are in the MPC specs. You are not using the MIDI map file that came with your sound device. This file, called MIDIMAP.CFG, is read by the MIDI Mapper program that comes with Windows 3.1. Windows comes with a default MIDIMAP.CFG file, but many sound device manufacturers supply their own. This replacement MIDIMAP.CFG file is usually copied to the SYSTEM sub-directory of your Windows directory when you run the manufacturer's Windows installation program. Check the documentation that came with your sound device, or contact the device manufacturer to find out how to re-run their installation program. You are using an Advanced Gravis UltraSound sound board, or another sound board that caches MIDI patches. There is a known conflict between our method of playing a melodic sound or sound effect and the Advanced Gravis sound driver. Try playing a .MID file in the Microsoft Windows Media Player application that comes with Windows 3.1 (usually found in the Accessories program group of the Program Manager). Do not use the BACH.MID file on the MPC Wizard CD, as this is a special MIDI file. If the file you selected plays in Media Player, then you know that the Windows Media Control Interface (MCI) is able to play a MIDI file. Your MIDI Mapper settings are not correct. To change them, run the Control Panel program (probably located in the Main program group of Program Manager). Double-click the MIDI Mapper icon. Read the on-line help instructions for the program, and try to correct your settings. Unless you know what you're doing, altering the settings could make matters worse. If you do attempt it, jot down your original settings in case you need to go back to them. The volume in the MIDI Mapper is not set correctly. To find out whether this is the case, do the following: 1. Run the Control Panel program (probably located in the Main program group of Program Manager). 2. Double-click the MIDI Mapper icon. 3. Click the Setups radio button. 4. Click the Edit button. 5. Look under the Patch Map Name column. If all the rows under the column say [None], then you are not using any patch maps, and MIDI Mapper volume is not your problem. In this case you can cancel out of the MIDI Mapper and the Control Panel programs. If any of the rows under the Patch Map Name column indicate you are using patch maps, then continue on to instruction #6. 6. Note the name of the patch map(s). 7. Click the Cancel button to return to the previous window. 8. Click the Patch Maps radio button. 9. Click the down arrow button. 10. Choose one of the patch maps you are using. 11. Click the Edit button. 12. Look at the Volume % column. The default setting for all instruments is 100. If yours is less, try increasing the volume for each instrument. To do so, click the box that contains the number you wish to change, then type in a new number or use the arrow buttons that appear. 13. When you're finished, click the OK button. 14. Repeat these instructions for every other patch map you are using, then exit the MIDI Mapper and the Control Panel. The Windows sound driver you are using is inadequate or outdated. Several manufacturers have issued updated Windows sound drivers. Contact the manufacturer of your device for information. You can also see if the MPC Wizard has the sound driver you need. To do so, click the Find a Driver button to the left, and click the Sound Drivers button. PROBLEM: The instruments don't sound like they should. Possible Causes/Solutions: Your sound device doesn't faithfully reproduce some or all instruments. There is no definition in the MPC specs of how an instrument should sound. Some sequencers will sound more realistic than others. The typical method of sound reproduction used by PC sequencers is FM synthesis. The FM synthesis method tries to imitate the sounds of instruments. Sequencers that use sampled sounds to recreate instruments will generally sound better than those that use FM synthesis. Sampled sounds, in this context, are digitized recordings of each instrument stored in the sound board's ROM (read-only memory) chip, or on your hard disk. You are not using the MIDI map file that came with your sound device. This file, called MIDIMAP.CFG, is read by the MIDI Mapper program that comes with Windows 3.1. Windows comes with a default MIDIMAP.CFG file, but many sound device manufacturers supply their own. This replacement MIDIMAP.CFG file is usually copied to the SYSTEM sub-directory of your Windows directory when you run the manufacturer's Windows installation program. To find out how to re-run the installation program, check the documentation that came with your sound device, or contact the device manufacturer . Your MIDI Mapper settings are not correct. To change them, do the following: 1. Run the Control Panel program (probably located in the Main program group of Program Manager). 2. Double-click the MIDI Mapper icon. 3. Read the on-line help instructions for the MIDI Mapper program, and try to correct your settings. Unless you know what you're doing, altering the settings could make matters worse. If you do attempt to alter the settings, jot down your original settings in case you need to go back to them. The Windows sound driver you are using is inadequate or outdated. Several manufacturers have issued updated Windows sound drivers. Contact the manufacturer of your device for information. You can also see if the MPC Wizard has the sound driver you need. To do so, click the Find a Driver button to the left, then click the Sound Drivers button. PROBLEM: A message appears saying that the file may not play correctly with the default MIDI setup. Possible Causes/Solutions: A standard MIDI file specifies what instrument(s) it wants the music to sound like. The test MIDI file on the MPC Wizard CD does not; it leaves that choice to you. This may cause a warning notice to appear on some systems. If the MIDI file plays after you click the OK button, click the Don't display this warning in future checkbox the next time you get this notice, and you will not see the message again. If the MIDI file doesn't play, see the other troubleshooting tips on this screen. PROBLEM: Your synthesizer device or device driver is not responding. Possible Causes/Solutions: You don't have an MPC-compatible sound device installed in your computer. Check to see whether your sound device's documentation states that it is MPC-compatible and supports MIDI audio (.MID) playback. Two or more devices installed on your system are using the same IRQ, DMA, or base I/O port settings in Windows. Peripheral devices attached to a PC (like graphics boards, sound boards, and mice) usually can't share any of these settings. Some devices allow changing these settings via software, while others require you to re-set jumpers on the board itself. Unfortunately, many programs designed to detect which of these settings are in use on your system only detect devices that are active at the time the program is running. We strongly suggest that you keep a list handy of the DMA, IRQ, and base I/O settings for each device on your system, so you can avoid headaches the next time you attempt to install a new peripheral device. You must be particularly careful when setting sound boards, since many of them on the market use multiple IRQs, DMAs, or port I/O settings. For instance, one sound card on the market uses a special base I/O port for MIDI in addition to another, general one. In addition, some sound devices allow you to set different DMAs and IRQs for Windows and DOS. You never installed the Windows MIDI Sequencer driver for your sound device, or it was installed incorrectly. A MIDI Sequencer driver specifically for Windows and specifically for your brand of sound device must be installed, apart from any other installation you may have done to use your device in DOS. Installation procedures for these drivers vary from device to device. Check the documentation that came with your device. You can also see if the MPC Wizard has the sound driver you need. To do so, click the Find a Driver button to the left, and click the Sound Drivers button. You have the wrong Windows MIDI Sequencer driver installed, or both the right and the wrong drivers installed. Remove the incorrect driver via the Drivers section of the Windows Control Panel. Then, if need be, load the correct driver by following the documentation that came with your device. You can also see if the MPC Wizard has the sound driver you need. To do so, click the Find a Driver button to the left, and click the Sound Drivers button. The statement mid=sequencer is missing from the [mci extensions] section of your WIN.INI file. Use a text editor (such as Windows Notepad) to insert the statement on a new line. This statement tells Windows to use the MIDI sequencer audio driver to play all files with a .mid extension. The statement Sequencer=mciseq.drv is missing from the [mci] section of your SYSTEM.INI file. Use a text editor (such as Windows Notepad) to insert the statement on a new line. This line tells Windows that MIDI audio should be played using the MCI Waveform Driver MCISEQ.DRV. You are running Windows in Standard Mode, and your Windows audio driver works only in 386 Enhanced Mode. Some drivers require that you run in the latter mode. Check your sound device's manual to see if this is the case with your driver. See your Windows manual for information about Standard and 386 Enhanced modes. PROBLEM: The MPC Wizard is unable to complete one or more tests. Possible Causes/Solutions: You never configured your MIDI sequencer device to work with the Windows multimedia interface known as MCI (Media Control Interface), or you didn't configure it correctly. Some Windows programs that incorporate MIDI sound don't use MCI. To configure your MIDI sequencer device to work with MCI, follow these directions: 1. Run the Control Panel program (probably located in the Main program group of Program Manager). 2. Double-click the Drivers icon. 3. Click the Add button. 4. Scroll down the list of drivers, and click [MCI] MIDI Sequencer. 5. Click OK to install it. 6. You will be asked for the appropriate Windows disk that contains the driver, so have your original Windows disks handy. 7. Shut down Windows and re-start it. Once you've installed the driver, run the MPC Wizard and try the MIDI audio tests again. Two or more devices installed on your system are using the same IRQ, DMA, or base I/O port settings in Windows. See the discussion of this above. The Windows sound driver you are using is inadequate or outdated. Several manufacturers have issued updated Windows sound drivers. Contact the manufacturer of your device for information. You can also see if the MPC Wizard has the sound driver you need. To do so, click the Find a Driver button to the left, and click the Sound Drivers button. A file or files that the MPC Wizard needs is damaged, or has been removed from the program's hard disk directory. Run the MPC Wizard SETUP.EXE program again from the CD and accept the default installation. Your CD-ROM drive may not be installed correctly. Check the appropriate manuals that came with your system. You are running Windows in Standard Mode, and your Windows audio driver works only in 386 Enhanced Mode. Some drivers require that you run in the latter mode. Check your sound device's manual to see if this is the case with your driver. See your Windows manual for information about Standard and 386 Enhanced modes. PROBLEM: You get a message saying there is no current MIDI map, or there is a problem with your MIDI mapper. Possible Causes/Solutions: You never installed the MIDI Mapper driver. This driver is needed in addition to the device-specific MIDI driver and [MCI] MIDI Sequencer drivers mentioned above. Follow these directions to install it: 1. Run the Control Panel program (probably located in the Main program group of Program Manager). 2. Double-click the Drivers icon. 3. Click the Add button. 4. Scroll down the list of drivers, and click MIDI Mapper. 5. Click OK to install it. 6. You will be asked for the appropriate Windows disk that contains the driver, so have your original Windows disks handy. Insert the requested disk when prompted. 7. Shut down Windows and re-start it. After you've installed the MIDI Mapper, run the MPC Wizard and try the MIDI audio tests again. There is no MIDI map file for the MIDI Mapper to read, or the file is corrupt. This file, called MIDIMAP.CFG, is read by the MIDI Mapper program that comes with Windows 3.1 or greater. Windows comes with a default MIDIMAP.CFG file, but many sound device manufacturers supply their own, and copy it to the SYSTEM sub-directory of your Windows directory when you run their installation program. Check the documentation that came with your sound device, or contact the device manufacturer to find out how to re-run their installation program. Your MIDI sequencer already complies with the Microsoft MIDI guidelines, and does not require a mapper. This may be the case if your MIDI sounds are acceptable in spite of the absence of the mapper. The Windows sound driver you are using is inadequate or outdated. Several manufacturers have issued updated Windows sound drivers. Contact the manufacturer of your device for information. You can also see if the MPC Wizard has the sound driver you need. To do so, click the Find a Driver button to the left, and click the Sound Drivers button. PROBLEM: MIDI audio sounds break up. Possible Causes/Solutions: The Windows MIDI sequencer driver you are using is inadequate or outdated. Several manufacturers have issued updated Windows drivers. Contact the manufacturer of your device for information. You can also see if the MPC Wizard has the MIDI sequencer driver you need. To do so, click the Find a Driver button to the left, and click the Sound Drivers button. If you find your device's driver, follow the installation instructions provided. Your CD-ROM drive is defective. Contact the retailer who sold it to you. PROBLEM: Sound quality is poor. Possible Causes/Solutions: The sound will only be as good as the weakest link in your audio chain. If you have an inexpensive MIDI sequencer, the sound will never be as good as a commercial CD audio recording of synthesized music even if your sound system is superb. If your MIDI sequencer is the finest money can buy but your speakers are poor in quality, the sound will be poor. Poor quality amplifiers will also produce poor sound even if the rest of the system is state-of-the-art. You have a sound device capable of using a 16-bit DMA, but it is not set up to do so. Using a 16-bit DMA will improve the sound quality of some devices. The 16-bit DMA settings are 4 through 7. The 8-bit DMA settings are 0 through 3. Some sound devices allow you to choose the DMA setting in the Drivers section of the Windows Control Panel. Others require you to set jumper switches on the sound card itself. See the manual that came with your sound device to see which case, if any, applies to you. Note that some PCs cannot use 16-bit DMA settings properly. If yours is one of them, you will have to be content with using an 8-bit DMA. The Windows sound driver you are using may be inadequate or outdated. Several manufacturers have issued updated Windows sound drivers. Contact the manufacturer of your device for information. You can also see if the MPC Wizard has the sound driver you need. To do so, click the Find a Driver button to the left, and click the Sound Drivers button. PROBLEM: MIDI audio sound works fine in the MPC Wizard, but not in other programs. Possible Causes/Solutions: The other programs are playing wave or CD audio sounds--not MIDI sounds--and there is a problem with your setup for wave or CD audio. Run the CD Audio and Wave Audio tests to see whether this is true. The statements mid=sequencer and rmi=sequencer are missing from the [mci extensions] section of your WIN.INI file. These statements associate all files having .mid and .rmi file extensions with the MIDI audio sound driver. Use a text editor (like Windows Notepad) to insert the statements on a new line. To go back to the previous screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen.......he previous screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen..reen.. page 25of 211 CD Audio Tips nextPage enterPage B"nextPage" 1845,1065,9300,5700 mainTextBounds scrollAmt showGoBackButton MPC Tests uSection CD Audio Tests parentSection C D A U D I O T R O U B L E S H O O T I N G T I P S =e=PROBLEM: You get a message saying the CD audio track played, but you didn't hear anything. Possible Causes/Solutions: External speakers are not attached to your sound device's output port. Plug them in. The volume control on your speakers is at 0. Some speakers have their own volume controls. Turn the volume up. The volume control on your sound device is at 0. Some sound boards have a volume control next to their output ports. Find the sound card in the back of your computer, find the volume control for output, and turn it up. Note that some cards also have a volume control to adjust the microphone or other input. That's not the control you want. The CD audio or master volume control of your sound mixer is set to 0. MPC specifications require a sound mixer, which is usually provided by the sound device manufacturer as a stand-alone Windows program. A sound mixer allows you to control the relative volume of each MPC music source (e.g., wave audio, CD audio, microphone, MIDI audio). A control is also provided to let you adjust the total volume from all sources. See if a mixer is installed on your system, or check for one on the disks that came with your sound device. Make sure that both volume controls in your mixer are set high enough. Your CD-ROM drive is not connected to your sound device, or not connected properly. To see whether this is the case, plug a pair of headphones into the appropriate jack on the front panel of your CD-ROM drive. Then try the CD Audio Tests again. If you hear what you're supposed to hear through your headphones, but not through your speakers, you've probably found your problem. Every MPC-compatible CD-ROM drive has one or more audio output jacks in back of it. Obtain the correct cable from the manufacturer or the dealer who sold you the drive. Then plug one end of the cable into the drive's output jack, and the other end into the appropriate input jack on your sound device. The CD-ROM driver you are using may be inadequate or outdated. A CD-ROM driver usually comes with a drive or a drive controller card. It is usually loaded automatically in the CONFIG.SYS file. Old drivers may not work with the Windows multimedia interface, or may not work properly. Several manufacturers have issued updated drivers for their CD-ROM drives. Some are contained on the Wizard CD. Click the Find a Driver button on the left, then click the CD-ROM Drivers button to see if a driver for your drive is included. If not, contact the manufacturer of your drive for information on how you can obtain one. Your CD-ROM drive may not be fully compatible with the Windows multimedia interface. PROBLEM: You get a message that no CD audio devices are installed. Possible Causes/Solutions: The CD-ROM drive that contains the MPC Wizard CD is not correctly configured to work with the Windows multimedia interface known as MCI (Media Control Interface). To correctly configure the drive, follow these directions: 1. Run the Control Panel program (probably located in the Main program group of Program Manager). 2. Double-click the Drivers icon. 3. Check the list of Installed Drivers for [MCI] CD Audio. 4. If [MCI] CD Audio is listed, click it, then click the Setup button, and go on to instruction #8. If [MCI] CD Audio is not listed, go on to instruction #5. 5. Click the Add button. 6. Scroll down the list of drivers, and click [MCI] CD Audio. 7. Click OK to install the driver. 8. If you have more than one CD-ROM drive you will be shown a dialog box that lets you choose which of the drives to configure. Drive 0 represents the first CD-ROM drive letter installed on your system, Drive 1 represents the second, and so on. Choose the appropriate drive number, then click OK. If [MCI] CD Audio is already installed on your system, skip instruction #9 and go on to #10. If it is not yet installed, continue on to instruction #9. 9. You will be asked for the appropriate Windows disk that contains the driver, so have your original Windows disks handy. Provide the disk when prompted. 10. Shut down Windows and re-start it. 11. Run the MPC Wizard again and go back to the CD Audio Test screen. The name that Windows assigned to your drive should now appear in the Information Reported by Your System box. The CD-ROM driver you are using may be inadequate or outdated. A CD-ROM driver usually comes with a drive or a drive controller card. It is usually loaded automatically in the CONFIG.SYS file. Old drivers may not work with the Windows multimedia interface, or not work properly. Several manufacturers have issued updated drivers for their CD-ROM drives. Some are right on this disc. Click the Install Driver button on the left, then click the CD-ROM Drivers button to see if a driver for your drive is included. If not, contact the manufacturer of your drive for information on how you can obtain one. PROBLEM: You get the message that the specified device is not open or is not recognized by MCI. Possible Causes/Solutions: You never configured your CD-ROM drive to work with the Windows multimedia interface known as MCI (Media Control Interface), or you didn't configure it correctly. To do so, follow the above directions for installing the [MCI] CD Audio driver. The MCI CD Audio driver is not installed correctly. Playing CD audio through MCI requires a special statement in the [MCI] section of the Windows SYSTEM.INI file. The statement must follow the following format: devicename=mcicda.drv int where devicename stands for the name of the CD audio device assigned by Windows, mcicda.drv is the MCI CD Audio driver file, and int stands for an integer that appears only when a system has multiple CD-ROMs attached to it. The integer indicates the CD-ROM device to which the device name is referring. A CD audio statement that refers to the CD-ROM drive containing the MPC Wizard is missing, or not in a valid format. Re-install the [MCI] CD Audio driver as outlined above. PROBLEM: The Left Channel and Right Channel tests come through both speakers. Possible Causes/Solutions: Some CD-ROM players or audio mixers, when instructed to play one channel only, will send that channel through both of your speakers. Other CD-ROM players or audio mixers will play the left channel only through the left speaker, and the right channel only through the right speaker. In the Stereo test, however, the left signal and right signal should come out of the left and right speakers, respectively. PROBLEM: The Speaker Tests have revealed that your left and right channels are reversed. Possible Causes/Solutions: Try running the Speaker Tests on the Wave Audio Tests screen to see whether the channels are reversed for wave audio, too. Then go to the Wave Audio Troubleshooting Tips screen and identify your problem. PROBLEM: Even after adjusting your volume and balance controls, the speaker's voice in the mono CD Audio Test doesn't sound like it's coming midway between your speakers, but instead sounds "dispersed." Possible Causes/Solutions: You have an "old" amplifier or "old" set of speakers, and your speakers are "out of phase." Two wires go to each speaker from the amplifier or sound device (though you may not be able to see this, because often the two wires are encased inside a single wrapping). Today's amplifiers are connected to today's speakers with wires that have jacks attached to both ends. These jacks prevent you from reversing the two wires that go to each speaker. Most old amplifiers and old speakers are not connected with wires that have jacks on them. This makes it easy to reverse the wires. Reversed wires cause a set of stereo speakers to be out of phase. Speakers are out of phase when one speaker's cone is moving in at the same moment that the other speaker's cone is moving out. To correct the problem, reverse the two wires going to one of the speakers. But be sure you are reversing the wires that carry the sound! A speaker with a built-in amplifier usually also has a power cable that attaches to it. Do not reverse the speaker and power cables! SoftKey International Inc. assumes no responsibility or liability for any suggestions we make. You're on your own. If you don't know what you're doing, contact someone who does (but not us, please!). PROBLEM: The channels are reversed when you test your speakers with the CD Audio Tests, but not when you test your speakers with the the Speaker Tests. Possible Causes/Solutions: The cable that sends CD audio through your sound device is reversed. This cable usually has a jack with three or four pins on both ends. One end of the cable plugs into your CD-ROM drive, and the other end plugs into your sound device. Try reversing the plug on one end of the cable. Make sure that you're working with the cable that carries the sound, because there may be other cables also going from your CD-ROM drive to your sound device. PROBLEM: The channels are reversed when you test your speakers with the Speaker Tests, but not when you test your speakers with the the CD Audio Tests. Possible Causes/Solutions: You have two problems. First, the cable that sends CD audio through your sound device is reversed. This cable usually has a jack with three or four pins on both ends. One end of the cable plugs into your CD-ROM drive, and the other end plugs into your sound device. Try reversing the plug on one end of the cable. Make sure that you're working with the cable that carries the sound, because there may be other cables also going from your CD-ROM drive to your sound device. Second, your speakers are placed incorrectly. Move the speaker currently on the left side to the right side, and move the speaker currently on the right side to the left side. PROBLEM: You get the message The MCI CD audio driver is not installed for drive __, or is not installed correctly. Possible Causes/Solutions: The drive that the MPC Wizard was launched from is not configured to play CD Audio through the Windows Media Control Interface (MCI), although there is another CD-ROM drive on the system that is configured to do so. If this is the case, you have one of two choices: 1. You can run the MPC Wizard in the CD-ROM drive that is configured to play CD Audio through MCI. In this case just exit the MPC Wizard, put the CD in the configured drive, and re-run the Wizard. 2. You can configure the drive that the Wizard is in to play CD Audio. To do this, follow the instructions for installing the [MCI] CD Audio driver outlined above. The MCI CD Audio driver is not installed correctly. The MPC Wizard looks in the [MCI] section of the Windows SYSTEM.INI file for information about the CD audio devices installed. A CD audio statement in the MCI section must follow the following format: devicename=mcicda.drv int where devicename stands for the name of the CD audio device assigned by Windows, mcicda.drv is the MCI CD Audio driver file, and int stands for an integer that appears only when a system has multiple CD-ROMs attached to it. The integer indicates the CD-ROM device to which the device name is referring. A CD audio statement that refers to one of your CD-ROM drives is not in a valid format. Re-install the [MCI] CD Audio driver as outlined above. PROBLEM: You get a message that drive __ is no longer valid . Possible Causes/Solutions: The CD-ROM driver you are using may be inadequate or outdated. A CD-ROM driver usually comes with a drive or a drive controller card. It is usually loaded automatically in the CONFIG.SYS file. Old drivers may not work with the Windows multimedia interface, or not work properly. Several manufacturers have issued updated drivers for their CD-ROM drives. Some are right on this disc. Click the Install Driver button on the left, then click the CD-ROM Drivers button to see if a driver for your drive is included. If not, contact the manufacturer of your drive for information on how you can obtain one. You have an old version of MSCDEX.EXE. MSCDEX.EXE allows the MS-DOS or PC-DOS operating systems (versions 3.1 or higher) to read CD-ROM discs, and is referred to as the MS-DOS CD-ROM Extensions. You must be using version 2.2 or greater. If you are running Windows 3.1 or greater, then you should be using MSCDEX.EXE Version 2.21 or greater. To find out the version you're running, click the MSCDEX Version button on the CD-ROM Drive Tests screen. MSCDEX.EXE files that have a file date before February, 1992 are older than version 2.21. To update your version contact your drive manufacturer. You can also purchase the latest version of MS-DOS, which comes with MSCDEX. You are using MSCDEX.EXE version 2.2 or greater and you have the statement device=LANMAN10.386 in the [386Enh] section of your SYSTEM.INI file. Remove this statement. It is only needed with versions of MSCDEX.EXE earlier than 2.2. The CD-ROM drive that contained the MPC Wizard disc when you opened this program has been disconnected. Exit this program, exit Windows, turn off your MPC, and reconnect the CD-ROM drive. Then re-enter Windows and run the MPC Wizard again. Your CD-ROM drive is not installed correctly. Check the appropriate manuals that came with your system. Your CD-ROM drive is defective. Contact the retailer who sold it to you. PROBLEM: You get a message that the device is already open, and that you should use the shareable flag with each open.' Possible Causes/Solutions: A CD-ROM drive serves two purposes in an MPC. It serves as a very large, read-only disk drive, and it also serves as an audio device controlled by the Windows Media Control Interface (MCI). As an audio device, it can be opened for playback by any Windows program. When a program opens a CD audio device it can, if it prefers, maintain exclusive control of the device for audio playback purposes until it decides to relinquish that control. It can also allow the device to be shared by other applications. Another Windows program has opened the CD-ROM drive that contains the MPC Wizard for audio playback purposes, and it is controlling it exclusively. Close the other application(s), and re-try the test. PROBLEM: The MPC Wizard is unable to complete one or more tests. Possible Causes/Solutions: The MPC Wizard CD is not in the same CD-ROM drive that it was in when the program was launched. Put the CD into the original drive, and re-try the test. One or more files that the MPC Wizard needs has been removed from the program's hard disk directory. Run the MPC Wizard SETUP.EXE program again from the CD and accept the default installation. See the causes/solutions listed under the problem "...drive __ is no longer valid." PROBLEM: CD audio sound works fine in the MPC Wizard, but not in other programs. Possible Causes/Solutions: The other programs are playing MIDI or wave audio sounds--not CD audio sounds--and there is a problem with your setup for MIDI or wave audio. Run the wave and MIDI tests to see whether this is true. PROBLEM: The quality of the sounds are poor. Possible Causes/Solutions: The sound will only be as good as the weakest link in your audio chain. The quality of sound reproduced by your CD-ROM drive should rival an audio-only CD player. But if your speakers are poor in quality, the sound will be poor. Poor quality amplifiers will also produce poor sound even if the rest of the system is state-of-the-art. To go back to the previous screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen..... bottom right of your screen. page 12of 166 Video for Windows Tests enterPage 286N7J8% 1,4,7,MS8_150 1,5,7,MS8_300 1,6,7,MS8_600 2,4,7,MS16_150 2,5,7,MS16_300 2,6,7,MS16_600 3,4,7,MS24_150 3,5,7,MS24_300 3,6,7,MS24_600 1,4,8,IN8_150 1,5,8,IN8_300 1,6,8,IN8_600 2,4,8,IN16_150 2,5,8,IN16_300 2,6,8,IN16_600 3,4,8,IN24_150 3,5,8,IN24_300 3,6,8,IN24_600 1,4,9,CV8_150 1,5,9,CV8_300 1,6,9,CV8_600 2,4,9,CV16_150 2,5,9,CV16_300 2,6,9,CV16_600 3,4,9,CV24_150 3,5,9,CV24_300 3,6,9,CV24_600 pMovieFiles 1,4,MS08_150,installGraphics 1,5,MS08_300,installGraphics 2,4,IN24_150,installSound 2,5,IN24_300,installSound 3,4,CP24_150,installCDROM 3,5,CP24_300,installCDROM pFileInfo 1845,1065,9300,4250 mainTextBounds scrollAmt showTipsButton showGoBackButton MPC Tests uSection Motion Video Tests parentSection V I D E O F O R W I N D O W S T E S T S About Video for Windows Video for Windows (VFW) stores motion video and wave audio in a single, standard computer file. The video portion can be played back without any additional hardware under Windows 3.1 or greater, while the sound plays back through an appropriate sound device (like an MPC-compatible sound board). Playing back motion video on today's personal computers presents two technical challenges. The first challenge is one of storage. Motion video files are huge. To decrease their size, a complex compression method is needed. To play back compressed files, an equally complex decompression method must be used. The Video for Windows standard allows third-parties to develop their own compression/decompression methods. A new method can be added to your system simply by installing a new driver. When you play back a movie, Video for Windows automatically sends the file to the appropriate driver for decompressing. The second challenge presented by motion video is one of speed. Data in a Video for Windows file must be read and displayed at very fast rates in order to simulate motion. CD-ROM drives, with their relatively slow data transfer rates, severely limit the performance of VFW movies. The minimum data transfer rate for acceptable performance using software-only decompression is 150 kilobytes per second (kps)--the MPC Level 1 standard for CD-ROM drives. Other components on your system also affect performance. Video for Windows demands a fast processor (CPU). The Level 2 MPC specifications call for at least a 25 MHz 486SX CPU. That CPU is probably the bare minimum required for tolerable VFW performance. Video for Windows also requires fast bitmapped graphics display performance. The MPC Wizard Bitmap Display Speed Tests measure how fast your system can put up a series of bitmaps on your screen, using the same drawing method used by Video for Windows. These tests can be found on the Graphics Tests screen. In addition to the Wizard Bitmap Display Tests, when you first install the Video for Windows MCI driver, or whenever you attempt to play a movie file after changing color depths, VFW performs a brief graphics display test. If your computer's graphics performance is inadequate at that color depth, a message box appears immediately after the test informing you that you may experience performance problems. When recording a Video for Windows movie, six important variables must be set: 1. The number of frames per second. 2. The size of the video frame. 3. The sampling rate of the audio. 4. The number of colors used. 5. The target data transfer rate. 6. The type of compression used. Increasing the quality of any one of these variables typically increases the demand on the MPC that plays back the movie. VFW movie developers must, therefore, make compromises in quality. These compromises can be severe if the movie is to be distributed on CD-ROM, since many consumers have only a single-speed unit capable of transferring data at a maximum rate of 150 kps. The Wizard tests come in two sizes: 240 x 180 pixels and 320 x 240 pixels. As of this writing, 240 X 180 pixels is about the largest size Video for Windows movie you can play off of a single-speed CD-ROM drive at 15 frames per second without any additional hardware. Satisfactory performance from the 320 x 240 movies will probably require a Pentium -class processor. When Video for Windows plays a movie, it tries to keep the video images in synch with the audio. If it can't read the data from the movie file fast enough, or can't display the images fast enough, it "drops" video frames. This tends to make the video appear jerky. If the data transfer rate is too slow to play the audio without interruption, then the sound also breaks up. About the Video for Windows Tests Three compression methods were used to create a total of six Video for Windows test movies (two movie sizes per method). Play each of the files, and see if you can discern the differences in quality between them. After a movie plays, a dialog box containing a set of performance statistics about that movie will appear. If your CD-ROM can't play one of the Wizard test movies very well, you can copy the movie to your hard drive and try playing it from there. Hard drives typically have a much higher data-transfer rate than CD-ROM drives. The test files are in the TESTVFW directory of the MPC Wizard, and have a .AVI extension. The three Video for Windows-compatible compression methods used in the Wizard tests are as follows: Microsoft Video 1. This method provides software-only decompression. The movies used for this test are in 16-bit color. Intel Indeo. The Indeo method supports both software-only and hardware-assisted decompression. Adding additional hardware allows for a larger playback window and improves the general performance of the video. The Intel Indeo movies provided for this test are in 24-bit color. If you are running Windows in less than 24-bit color, the movies' color palettes will be automatically reduced (dithered) at runtime to match the number of available colors. Cinepak. The Cinepak movies for this test are in 24-bit color. As with the Intel Indeo movies, the color palettes on these movies will be automatically reduced at runtime to match the number of colors available on your system. Click the MPC Wizard Test File radio button below to choose one of the test movies provided on the MPC Wizard CD. Then click one of the Compression Method and Movie Size radio buttons below to choose the method and size of movie you want. If you have a VFW movie other than a Wizard test file that you'd like to test your system with, click the radio button below labeled Your Own File. Click the Play Video File button when you want to view the movie. If you chose to play your own file, clicking this button will bring up a dialog box that lets you find and load a VFW movie of your choice. If you encounter a problem, click the troubleshooting tips button at the bottom right of your screen. To go back to the previous screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen.n...e bottom right of your screen.m right of your screen. your screen. page 11of 111 movieSizes compressionMethods Play Video File playVideoFile Play Video File... buttonClick (#.# Click this radio button to choose to play a test file from the MPC Wizard CD during the Video for Windows test. statusBarText MPC Wi&zard Test File *$0$ Click this radio button to choose to play a file of your own during the Video for Windows test. statusBarText &Your Own File bottomLine topLine Click a radio button below to choose the source of the Video for Windows test file. statusBarText Source '<(Z) compressionMethods MPC Wizard test file. wizardStatusBar This feature is available only when you've chosen to play an mouseEnter statusBarText Click this radio button to choose an MPC Wizard test file created with the Microsoft Video 1 compression method. statusBarText Microsoft &Video 1 Click this radio button to choose an MPC Wizard test file created with the Intel Indeo compression method. statusBarText Intel &Indeo Click this radio button to choose an MPC Wizard test file created with the Cinepak compression method. statusBarText Cine&pak Click a radio button below to choose a Video for Windows test file created with one of three compression methods. statusBarText Compression Method bottomLine topLine playVideoFile .&+ +E testvfw\ lsFilename runVFWTest _240.AVI svCDdrive openFileDlg VFW Files (*.avi),*.avi,All Files (*.*),*.* Choose a Video for Windows File... _320.AVI buttonClick After you've chosen a source and compression method, click this button to play your choice. statusBarText Play Video File movieSizes MPC Wizard test file. wizardStatusBar This feature is available only when you've chosen to play an mouseEnter statusBarText Click this radio button to choose an MPC Wizard test file recorded at 240 x 180 pixels. statusBarText &240 x 180 Click this radio button to choose an MPC Wizard test file recorded at 320 x 240 pixels. statusBarText &320 x 240 Click a radio button below to choose a Video for Windows test file recorded in one of two sizes. statusBarText Movie Size bottomLine topLine buttonChosen graphic pgrOtherButton lockScreen ` = 240,95.5,100 setAllButtonColors xbuttonDown B"MPC 1" --(enabled --( ybuttonDown llCnt1 " && changeButton +pTarget B = 240,95.5,100 bottomLine topLine showMotion setvideo aniFile off wait close aniFile wait leavePage callMCI("setvideo aniFile off wait") %close ait","") 'close testingMotion Testing Intel Indeo 3. You should be seeing and hearing a movie now! Press Esc to stop test.est.ow! Press Esc to stop test.rt test.t. showMotion Video for Windows Tips nextPage enterPage B"nextPage" showGoBackButton 1845,1065,9300,5700 mainTextBounds scrollAmt MPC Tests uSection Video for Windows Tests parentSection V F W T R O U B L E S H O O T I N G T I P SL E S H O O T I N G T I P S PROBLEM: You get a message saying you should be hearing and seeing a movie, but you don't hear anything. Possible Causes/Solutions: External speakers are not attached to your sound device's output port. Plug them in. The volume control on your speakers is set to 0. Some speakers have their own volume controls. Turn the volume up. The volume control on your sound device is set to 0. Some sound boards have a volume control next to their output ports. Find the sound card in the back of your computer, find the volume control for output, and turn it up. Note that some cards also have a volume control to adjust the microphone or other input. That's not the control you want. The wave audio or master volume control in your sound mixer is set to 0. MPC specifications require a sound mixer, which is usually provided by the sound device manufacturer as a stand-alone Windows program. A sound mixer allows you to control the relative volume of each MPC music source (e.g., wave audio, CD audio, microphone, and MIDI audio). A control is also provided to let you adjust the total volume from all sources. See if a mixer is installed on your system, or check for one on the disks that came with your sound device. Make sure that both volume controls in your mixer are set high enough. PROBLEM: You are unable to play any videos. Possible Causes/Solutions: You never installed the Video for Windows drivers. Exit the MPC Wizard and go to the Windows Program Manager. Make sure that the MPC Wizard CD is in your CD-ROM drive. Choose the File menu, choose Run, then type D:\VFWSETUP\SETUP where D is the letter of your CD-ROM drive. This will start the Microsoft Video for Windows runtime installation program, which will load the Microsoft Video 1, Intel Indeo, and Cinepak decompressors. The statement avi=AVIVideo is missing from the [mci extensions] section of your WIN.INI file. This statement associates all files having a .avi file extension with the Video for Windows driver. Use a text editor (like Windows Notepad) to insert the statement. PROBLEM: You are unable to play the Cinepak movies, but the other movies work. Possible Causes/Solutions: You previously installed the Microsoft Video 1 and Intel Video for Windows drivers, but you now need to install the Cinepak driver as well. Follow the directions above for installing the Video for Windows runtime. You should run this setup program even if you already have Video for Windows installed in your system, since it installs the Cinepak driver at the same time. It will not overwrite any Video for Windows drivers on your system if those drivers are a later version than the ones on the CD. PROBLEM: The sound played, but the video didn't. Possible Causes/Solutions: When you ran the MPC Wizard Setup program, you probably decided not to install the Video for Windows runtime. Even if you're already using Video for Windows version 1.1 or later, you still may be using versions of the Indeo, MS Video 1, or Cinepak decompressors that pre-date the ones on the MPC Wizard CD. Your best bet is to run the Video for Windows Runtime Setup program and let it install the necessary files. To do so, go to the Windows Program Manager, pull down the File menu, select Run, and type D:\VFWSETUP\VFWSETUP (where D is the letter of your CD-ROM drive). The VFW Setup program will not overwrite more recent versions of any files that may already exist on your hard disk. PROBLEM: Your videos are jerky and/or the sound breaks up. Possible Causes/Solutions: Your CD-ROM drive might not be transferring data from the CD fast enough. The test movies on the MPC Wizard CD require that your CD-ROM drive be able to transfer 150 KB per second. If your MPC can't read the data from the Wizard CD fast enough, VFW tries to play the audio without interruption, but "drops" video frames. This makes the video appear jerky. If VFW can't keep up with the audio either, then the sound also breaks up. While your MPC is transferring data from the CD it must simultaneously perform other tasks, like rapidly draw the video on the screen as well as play the sound. But if 100% of your computer's CPU time is required just to transfer 150 KB of data per second from the CD, there's simply not enough processing power left to perform the other tasks. To see how fast your drive can transfer data click the MPC Tests button to your left, click the CD-ROM Drive Tests button, then run the 40% Data Transfer Rate Test. Your drive should be able to transfer at least 150 KB of data per second using 40% of the CPU. See Troubleshooting Tips in the CD-ROM Drive Tests section if you want more information. Another way to test whether your CD-ROM drive is the cause of your problem is to copy the test movies from the TESTVFW directory of the Wizard CD to your hard drive, and try playing them from there (see the Video for Windows Tests screen to learn how to do this). If the test movies play smoothly from your hard disk, then you know the problem is with your CD-ROM drive. A hard drive transfers data much faster than 150 KB per second. A device installed on your system is using the same IRQ, DMA, or base I/O port settings in Windows as your sound device, CD controller device, or both. To investigate this possibility, try playing one of the movies from your hard disk using the instructions on the Video for Windows Tests screen. If the movies sound good when played from your hard drive, but the sound breaks up when played from the CD, look at the discussion of IRQ, DMA, and base I/O port conflicts under Wave Audio Troubleshooting Tips. Your graphics device has a performance problem. If Windows is running in greater than 256-color mode, try changing the display driver to 256 colors (i.e., 8-bit). Most graphics devices perform faster when they have to display fewer colors. Your computer's processor (CPU) is inadequate. Video for Windows demands a fast processor. The Level 2 MPC specifications call for at least a 25 mHz 486SX CPU. That CPU is probably the very minimum one required for tolerable VFW performance. Your sound device has a performance problem running Video for Windows movies. Several sound device manufacturers have issued updated Windows drivers for their cards. Contact the manufacturer of your device for information. You can also see if the MPC Wizard has the sound driver you need. To do so, click the Find a Driver button to the left, and then click the Sound Drivers button. PROBLEM: When you first installed the Video for Windows drivers, or when you tried playing a movie after changing color depths, you got a message saying that you may encounter performance problems. Possible Causes/Solutions: Your computer's processor (CPU) is inadequate. Video for Windows demands a fast processor. The Level 2 MPC specifications call for at least a 25 mHz 486SX CPU. That is probably the minimum CPU required for tolerable VFW performance. The bitmap display speed of your graphics device is inadequate. If Windows is running in greater than 256-color mode, try changing the display driver to 256 colors (i.e., 8-bit). Most graphics devices perform faster when they have to display fewer colors. PROBLEM: You get a message that the specified device is not open or is not recognized by MCI. Possible Causes/Solutions: The MPC Wizard CD is not in your CD-ROM drive. Put the disc in the drive. PROBLEM: The movies are very small. Possible Causes/Solutions: If you are running Windows at a resolution of 800 by 600 pixels or higher, you can reduce your resolution to 640 by 480 to make the movies look larger. To do this, change your Windows graphics display driver. To go back to the previous screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen.screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen.ight of your screen.een.. page 11of 8 MPEG Video Tips nextPage enterPage B"nextPage" 1845,1065,9300,5700 mainTextBounds scrollAmt showGoBackButton MPC Tests uSection MPEG Video Tests parentSection M P E G T R O U B L E S H O O T I N G T I P S PROBLEM: You are unable to play the movie. Possible Causes/Solutions: You don't have the hardware necessary to play MPEG files. Unlike Video for Windows, MPEG movies currently need hardware in addition to what is required under MPC Level 1 or Level 2 specifications. You never installed the MPEG driver for the Windows Media Control Interface (MCI), or you installed it incorrectly. Though you may have a Windows program that plays MPEG movies, in order for the MPC Wizard test to work you must have an MCI-compatible driver installed. You can probably get one from the dealer who sold you your MPEG device, or from the device's manufacturer. Two or more devices installed on your system are using the same IRQ, DMA, or base I/O port settings in Windows. Peripheral devices attached to a PC (like graphics boards, sound boards, and mice) usually can't share any of these settings. Some devices allow changing these settings via software, while others require you to re-set jumpers on the board itself. Unfortunately, many programs designed to detect which of these settings are in use on your system only detect devices that are active at the time the program is running. We strongly suggest you keep a list handy of the DMA, IRQ, and base I/O settings for each device on your system, so you can avoid headaches the next time you attempt to install a new peripheral device. You must be particularly careful if your MPEG device also supports wave or MIDI audio playback, since it may require multiple IRQ, DMA, or port I/O settings. Your MPEG device requires that a separate sound device be installed on your system, and no such device is installed. Your MPEG board uses the separate sound device installed on your system, and you never installed the Windows sound driver for that device, or installed it incorrectly. A sound driver specifically for Windows and specifically for your brand of sound device must be installed, apart from any other installation you may have done to use your device in DOS. Installation procedures for these drivers vary from device to device. Check the documentation that came with your device. You can also see if the MPC Wizard has the sound driver you need. To do so, click the Find a Driver button to the left, and then click the Sound Drivers button. Your MPEG board uses the separate sound device installed on your system, and you have the wrong Windows sound driver installed, or both the right and the wrong drivers installed. Remove the incorrect driver via the Drivers section of the Windows Control Panel. Then, if need be, load the correct driver by following the documentation that came with your device. You can also see if the MPC Wizard has the sound driver you need. To do so, click the Find a Driver button to the left, and then click the Sound Drivers button. You are running Windows in Standard Mode, and your Windows MPEG driver works only in 386 Enhanced Mode. Check your MPEG device's manual to see if this is the case with your driver. See your Windows manual for information about Standard and 386 Enhanced modes. One or more of the files that the MPC Wizard needs is damaged, or has been removed from the program's hard disk directory. Run the MPC Wizard SETUP.EXE program again from the CD and accept the default installation. PROBLEM: You are unable to play the full-screen movie . Possible Causes/Solutions: Your MPEG device may not be able to stretch a movie larger than its recorded size. Check your device's manual. Your MPEG device driver does not understand the Windows MCI command that tells it to maximize the movie's window. PROBLEM: You don't see anything. Possible Causes/Solutions: Some MPEG boards require that a cable be connected from the board to the feature connector of a separate graphics device, and that your monitor's cable be plugged into the MPEG board. Check if this is the case with your MPEG board. Also note that MPEG boards with this setup may require that a terminator be attached to video output jack of the separate graphics device. PROBLEM: You don't hear anything. Possible Causes/Solutions: External speakers are not attached to your sound device's output port. Plug them in. Some MPEG devices come with their own sound output port. If this is the case with yours, make sure that speakers are plugged into this device. The volume control on your speakers is set to 0. Some speakers have their own volume controls. Turn the volume up. Your MPEG board uses the separate sound device installed on your system, and the volume control on your sound device is set to 0. Some sound boards have a volume control next to their output ports. Find the sound card in the back of your computer, find the volume control for output, and turn it up. Note that some cards also have a volume control to adjust the microphone or other input. That's not the control you want. Your MPEG board uses the separate sound device installed on your system, and the wave audio or master volume control in your sound mixer is set to 0. MPC specifications require a sound mixer, which is usually provided by the sound device manufacturer as a stand-alone Windows program. A sound mixer allows you to control the relative volume of each MPC music source (i.e., wave audio, CD audio, microphone, and MIDI audio). A control is also provided to let you adjust the total volume from all sources. See if a mixer is installed on your system, or check for one on the disks that came with your sound device. Make sure that both volume controls in your mixer are set high enough. PROBLEM: Your videos are jerky and/or the sound breaks up. Possible Causes/Solutions: Your computer's processor (CPU) is inadequate. Check your MPEG device's manual for the minimum CPU requirements. The buffer for your CD-ROM drive is insufficient. When loading the file MSCDEX.EXE, increase its /M parameter to between 12 and 20. MSCDEX.EXE is probably loaded from your AUTOEXEC.BAT, so go into the latter with a text editor (like Notepad) and make the change. There is a problem with your CD-ROM drive. Click MPC Tests, then click the CD-ROM Drive Tests button to run the CD-ROM Drive Tests. Also see Troubleshooting Tips in the CD-ROM Drive Tests section. PROBLEM: You get the message that the specified device is not open or is not recognized by MCI. Possible Causes/Solutions: The MPC Wizard CD is not in your CD-ROM drive. Put the CD in the drive and try again. To go back to the previous screen, click the return button at the bottom right of your screen.tom right of your screen. page 1 of 9 Find a Driver go Find a Graphics Driver enterPage Find a Graphics Driver" Find a Driver uSection 1845,1065,9300,4020 mainTextBounds scrollAmt F I N D A D R I V E R Drivers are software programs that allow a computer peripheral--like a graphics, sound, or CD-ROM device--to communicate properly with the computer's operating system (in our case, Windows or MS-DOS). Some drivers come with the operating system (like the standard 16-color Windows VGA display driver). But more often they are provided by the manufacturer or distributor of the peripheral device, and included with the device when you purchase it. These device providers from time to time offer new, improved versions of their drivers. Normally, you have to contact them in order to obtain these drivers. But the MPC Wizard provides you with drivers for the most popular graphics and sound devices on the market today. We also provide you with several CD-ROM drivers. Click the appropriate button below to find the driver you need...... Then page 1 of 2 go Find a Graphics Driver Click this button to locate a graphics device driver on the MPC Wizard disc. statusBarText &Graphics Drivers go Find a Sound Driver Click this button to locate a sound device driver on the MPC Wizard disc. statusBarText &Sound Drivers go Find a CD-ROM Driver Click this button to locate a CD-ROM device driver on the MPC Wizard disc. statusBarText CD-R&OM Drivers Find a Graphics Driver selectDriver enterPage sDriverText sHasBeenClicked leavePage 6"8v9 ahead chips cirrus diamond everex genoa video7 maxon orchid paradise sigma tecmar trident tseng pDirs Ahead Systems Avance Logic Boca Research Cardinal Technologies (ET4000) Cardinal Technologies Cirrus Logic Chips & Technologies (452) Chips & Technologies (453) Chips & Technologies (64200) Chips & Technologies (655xx) Diamond Computer (Stealth) Diamond Computer (SpeedStar) Diamond Computer (SpeedStar 24-bit) Everex (EV235, Windows 3.0) Everex (EV623, Windows 3.0) Everex (EV629, Windows 3.0) Everex (EV633, Windows 3.0) Everex (EV634, Windows 3.1) Everex (EVGA, Windows 3.0, 16-color) Genoa (6000 Series) Genoa (7900 Series) Genoa (8000 Series) Matrox (Illuminator-16) Matrox (Impression 1024) Matrox (Impression) Matrox (Impression Ultra) Oak Technologies Orchid Technology (ProDesigner II) Paradise Radius SVGA MultiView Radius MultiView 24 Sigma Designs (SigmaVGA Legend II) SixGraph STB (Chips 480) STB (AVGA1) STB (PowerGraph) STB (Evolution VGA) STB (AVGA2) STB (WIND/X) SuperMatch (Thunder/24) Trident (TVGA) Trident (HiColor) Tseng Labs (ET3000) Tseng Labs (ET4000) Video Seven pSelections "Ahead Systems","1/2/93","all",std,"ahead" "ATI","10/2/92","Wonder, Ultra","The ATI drivers can't be installed directly from the MPC Wizard CD. Instead, copy the files stored in the \WIZSETUP\ATI_W31\ directory to a floppy disk that can be read from drive A. Then read the README.TXT text file in the \WIZSETUP\ATI_W31\ directory on the MPC Wizard CD for further directions." pDrivers Find a Driver uSection 1845,1065,9300,4250 mainTextBounds scrollAmt showGoBackButton Find a Driver parentSection graphics driverFileName F I N D A G R A P H I C S D R I V E R Directions Click the down-arrow button in the box below labeled Graphics Device or Chipset Manufacturer. It will pop down a list of all the manufacturers whose graphics drivers are on the MPC Wizard CD. Scroll through the list and click on the manufacturer and model of your graphics device. If your device's manufacturer isn't listed, click the Device Info. button below. By reading your graphics device BIOS, it should be able to report the manufacturer of the graphics chipset on your device (which may be different from the company who made your device). In most cases you can use the generic driver made for your chipset, but check with the manufacturer of your graphics device to be certain. The name of the device you select will appear in the text box. Jot down the directory path indicated in the text box labeled Directory Path Where You Can Find the Driver(s). This directory contains a Windows 3.1 driver for your device, unless a different version of Windows is specifically mentioned in the Graphics Device or Chipset Manufacturer text box. You can also copy the path to the Windows clipboard by clicking the Copy Path to Clipboard button. Then you can paste it into a text file editor like Windows Notepad, or into any application that accepts text. Run the Windows File Manager or an equivalent program. Locate the directory you jotted down. See if there is an informational text file such as README.TXT, README, READ.ME or the like included with your driver files. Read this text file to learn how to install your drivers. In some cases there may be multiple text files that you should read. Each driver is different. Unless a README.TXT file tells you otherwise, copy the files stored in your driver's directory to a floppy disk. If there are directories inside of the directory, and they are labeled disk01, disk02, etc., copy the files inside each one of these directories to separate floppy disks. Some setup programs require that the setup disk be placed in your A: drive, though most do not. Therefore, unless the total size of the files you are copying exceeds your floppy disk space, it's best to copy them to a disk that can be read from drive A:. Have the floppy disks from which you originally installed Windows handy when you install your driver, since you may be asked for one or more of them during the course of your setup. You may be wondering why the MPC Wizard doesn't install the driver you need for you, or at least allow you to install it directly off of the CD. The reason is that, while many drivers share the same setup method, many do not. The present format allows us to frequently update the MPC Wizard's driver selection, as well as keep the price low. Users of Quarterdeck's QEMM386.SYS, Microsoft's EMM386.EXE, or another expanded memory manager may need to add an EXCLUDE switch to the line that loads the program in order to prevent it from using an area of memory needed by your VGA device when displaying more than 16 colors. See your memory manager's documentation for details. You can accomplish the same result (effective in Windows only) by adding the following statement to the [386Enh] section of your Windows SYSTEM.INI file: emmexclude=C400-C7FF This statement prevents Windows from using the area of memory C400 to C7FF. C400 and C7FF are hexadecimal (base 16) numbers. To block a different area of memory, change the hexadecimal number range. If necessary, see your Windows User's Guide for more information on installing device drivers not supplied with Windows. Windows 3.1 users can also check the section Using Specific Display Adapters with Windows Version 3.1 in the file README.WRI, located in the Windows directory. Drivers are provided by SoftKey International as a public service. If you encounter problems with any of them, please contact the specific manufacturer. The rights to the programs on the MPC Wizard CD are owned by their respective manufacturers and are provided "AS IS" exclusively for their customers. They may not be redistributed without the express written permission of the manufacturer. SoftKey International disclaims all warranties, expressed or implied, including merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose.. page 1 of 800 selectDriver sDriverText false sHasBeenClicked enterDropDown sHasBeenClicked leaveDropDown sDriverText false sHasBeenClicked mouseLeave Click the arrow button for a list of graphics drivers on the MPC Wizard CD. Then click the driver for your graphics device. statusBarText Ahead Systems uLastSelection [no driver selected]GraphicsEngine 32, 32VL, Ultra ISAC" Actix GE i Series v. 2.22 Actix GraphicsEngine, GE 1280, 1280TC Actix ver. 1.33 for GraphicsEngine 32, 32VL, Ultra ISA Actix ver. 2.21 for GraphicsEngine 32, 32VL, Ultra Ahead Systems ATI (Various VGA and Accelerator) ATI 2.0 Mach Windows Driver ATI Accelerated VGA ATI Mach Ultra Avance Logic GUI-Ultra Avance Logic GUI-Ultra (Windows 3.0) Boca Research Cirrus Super VGA Boca Research Super X Accelerator VGA Boca Research SuperVGA Boca Research Vortek VL driver Cache Computers, Inc. Cardinal ET4000-based Cards Cardinal S3-based Cards Chips and Technologies 452 Chips and Technologies 453 Chips and Technologies 481 + 450 + 404A Chips and Technologies 481 + 64200 + 404A Chips and Technologies 64200 Chips and Technologies 655XX Cirrus Logic 5402/5420 Cirrus Logic 5422/5424 Cirrus Logic 5426/28 Cirrus Logic 642X Diamond SpeedSTAR 24 Diamond Speedstar 24X Diamond SpeedStar Pro Diamond SpeedSTAR VGA Diamond Stealth 24 Diamond Stealth 32 Diamond Stealth Pro Diamond Stealth VRAM Diamond Viper VLB Everex EV634 Genoa 1MB VGA Genoa 6000 VGA Genoa 7900 VGA Genoa 8000 VGA Genoa 8500 VGA Genoa 8500 VL VGA Genoa 8700 VGA Genoa 8900 VL/PCI VGA Genoa Multimedia VGA Genoa Windows VGA 24 Hercules Hercules Chrome Hercules Dynamite Hercules Graphite 1MB VRAM Hercules Graphite 2MB VRAM Hercules Superstation 3D Hercules Superstation XP Matrox Illuminator-16 Matrox Impression Matrox Impression 1024 Matrox Impression Ultra Media Vision Pro Graphics 1024 Media Vision Pro Graphics 1280 Media Vision Thunder & Lightning NCR VGA New Media Graphics Super VideoWindows Oak Technology OTI-067/077 Oak Technology OTI-087 Rev. B/D Ver. 1.6 Oak Technology OTI-087 Rev. X Oak Technology OTI-087 Windows for Pen Orchid Fahrenheit Orchid ProDesigner II Series Paradise / Western Digital VGA Standard Paradise/Western Digital Windows Accelerator Card PC Logic V1000 (Windows 3.0) PC Logic V2000 PC Logic VCOLOR Radius Multiview 24 Radius SVGA MultiView Radius XGA-2 S3 24-bit 911/928 Windows 3.1 driver S3 805 Windows 3.1 driver S3 911/924 Windows 3.1 driver S3 928 Windows 3.1 driver Sierra HiCOLOR Oak Sierra HiCOLOR S3 Sierra HiCOLOR Trident Sierra HiCOLOR Tseng Sierra HiCOLOR Western Digital Sigma Designs L-View PC Classic Sigma Designs Legend 24LX Sigma Designs Legend GX Sigma Designs Multimode 120 Sigma Designs Multimode 150 Sigma Designs SigmaVGA Legend I & II Sigma Designs WinStorm Sixgraph P9000 driver Sixgraph Wizard 924 driver STB Evolution VGA STB Horizon STB Pegasus VL STB PowerGraph VGA STB PowerGraph X24 STB PowerGraph/ERGO VGA STB Wind/X SuperMatch Spectrum (EISA boards) SuperMatch Spectrum (ISA boards) SuperMatch Spectrum (VESA boards) SuperMatch Thunder (EISA boards) SuperMatch Thunder (ISA boards) SuperMatch Thunder (VESA boards) Trident TVGA Tseng Labs ET3000 Tseng Labs ET4000 Tseng Labs ET4000/W32 and ET4000/AX Video 7 bottomLine topLine copyToClipBd copyDriver buttonClick Click this button to copy the directory path listed above to the Windows clipboard. statusBarText Copy &Path to Clipboard readingCD Reading driver information from the MPC Wizard CD. Please wait... colorTest .&+ +E .&+ +E showGraphicsBiosInfo buttonClick If you're unsure of the driver you need, click this button to read info. from your graphics device BIOS. It may help you to decide. statusBarText Device &Info. bottomLine topLine Click the arrow button below for a list of graphics drivers on the MPC Wizard CD. Then click the driver for your graphics device. statusBarText Graphics Device or Chipset Manufacturer bottomLine topLine After you've chosen a graphics driver, the box below indicates the path where you can find it. Use the button to copy the path. statusBarText Directory Path Where You Can Find the Driver(s) bottomLine topLine wizPath This is the path where you can find the graphics driver you've chosen from the above pop-down list. statusBarText [no driver selected]pclv2000\actix03 bottomLine topLine an find the graphics driver you've chosen from the above pop-down list. statusBarText [no driver selected]pclv2000\actix03 bottomLine topLine Find a Sound Driver selectDriver enterPage sDriverText sHasBeenClicked leavePage = comboBox "selectDriver" -- @ What bug workaround?: sendKeys("{ } 5",0) 4sDriverText, sHasBeenClicked adgravis atiaudio cmpudyne covox sndblstr proaudio mediasonc voyetra pDirs Aztech (Sound Galaxy) Aztech (Sound Galaxy Pro) Covox Media Vision (AudioPort) Media Vision (CDPC) Media Vision (Pro Audio Spectrum 16) Media Vision (Pro Audio Spectrum Plus) Media Vision (ThunderBoard) MediaSonic Turtle Beach Systems (MultiSound) pSelections sound driverFileName 1845,1065,9300,4250 mainTextBounds scrollAmt showGoBackButton Find a Driver parentSection MPC Tests uSection F I N D A S O U N D D R I V E RE Directions Click the down-arrow button in the box below labeled Sound Device or Chipset Manufacturer. It will pop down a list of all the manufacturers whose sound drivers are on the MPC Wizard CD. Scroll through the list and click on the manufacturer and model of your sound device. If your device's manufacturer isn't listed, contact the manufacturer to find out if it's compatible with any of the drivers listed. The name of the device you select will appear in the text box. Jot down the directory path indicated in the text box labeled Directory Path Where You Can Find the Driver(s). This directory contains a Windows 3.1 driver for your device, unless a different version of Windows is specifically mentioned in the Sound Device or Chipset Manufacturer text box. You can also copy the path to the Windows clipboard by clicking the Copy Path to Clipboard button. Then you can paste it into a text file editor like Windows Notepad, or into any application that accepts text. Run the Windows File Manager or an equivalent program. Locate the directory you jotted down. See if there is an informational text file such as README.TXT, README, READ.ME or the like included with your driver files. Read this text file to learn how to install your drivers. In some cases there may be multiple text files that you should read. Each driver is different. Unless a README.TXT file tells you otherwise, copy the files stored in your driver's directory to a floppy disk. If there are directories inside of the directory, and they are labeled disk01, disk02, etc., copy the files inside each one of these directories to separate floppy disks. Some setup programs require that the setup disk be placed in your A: drive, though most do not. Therefore, unless the total size of the files you are copying exceeds your floppy disk space, it's best to copy them to a disk that can be read from drive A:. You may be wondering why the MPC Wizard doesn't install the driver you need for you, or at least allow you to install it directly off of the CD. The reason is that, while many drivers share the same setup method, many do not. The present format allows us to frequently update the MPC Wizard's driver selection, as well as keep the price low. If necessary, see your Windows User's Guide for more information on installing drivers not supplied with Windows. Windows 3.1 users can also check the file README.WRI, located in the Windows directory. Drivers are provided by SoftKey International as a public service. If you encounter problems with any of them, please contact the specific manufacturer. The rights to the programs on the MPC Wizard CD are owned by their respective manufacturers and are provided "AS IS" exclusively for their customers. They may not be redistributed without the express written permission of the manufacturer. SoftKey International disclaims all warranties, expressed or implied, including merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. page 1 of 100 selectDriver sDriverText false sHasBeenClicked enterDropDown sHasBeenClicked leaveDropDown sDriverText false sHasBeenClicked mouseLeave following 3 handlers are needed around a bug that comboBox even user moves mouse off enterDropDown 4sDriverText, sHasBeenClicked leaveDropDown Click the arrow button for a list of sound drivers on the MPC Wizard CD. Then click the driver for your sound device. statusBarText [no driver selected] & Lightningness Audio Advanced Gravis UltraSound ATI Stereo F/X Sound Card Aztech Multimedia Pro 16L Aztech Systems Multimedia Pro 16 Aztech Systems Sound Galaxy Business Audio Aztech Systems Sound Galaxy BX II Aztech Systems Sound Galaxy NX Pro 16 Aztech Systems Sound Galaxy Pro Cardinal Sound Studio Covox Laser Digital Media Concept 2.0 Laser Digital Media Concept Pro Media Vision Audio Port Media Vision Pro Audio Spectrum (Rev. C Boards) Media Vision Pro Audio Spectrum (Rev. D Boards) Media Vision Pro Audio Studio Media Vision Pro Sonic 16 Media Vision Thunder & Lightning Media Vision Thunderboard MediaSonic Toptek Golden Sound Pro 16 Toptek Golden Sound Pro 2 Toptek Golden Sound Pro 3 Toptek Golden Sound Pro Deluxe Toptek Golden Sound Ver. 2.5amond Sonic Sound Diamond Sonic Sound LX Diamond Sonic Sound LX OP (Opti Board Only) Diamond Sonic Sound LX Revision K Laser Digital Media Concept 2.0 Laser Digital Media Concept Pro Media Vision Audio Port Media Vision Pro Audio Spectrum (Rev. C Boards) Media Vision Pro Audio Spectrum (Rev. D Boards) Media Vision Pro Audio Studio Media Vision Pro Sonic 16 Media Vision Thunder & Lightning Media Vision Thunderboard MediaSonic Oak Mozart Sound System Driver (B chip only) Ver. 1.06 Oak Mozart Sound System Driver (E chip only) Ver. 2.41 Orchid GameWave 32 Orchid SoundWave 32 Packard Bell Forte 16SB3 PC Logic CDROM driver for Sound Studio PC Logic DSP16 and Sonic 16 PC Logic Sound Studio Sigma Designs WinWave Board Sigma Designs WinWave Board Non-SCSI CD Sound Galaxy Basic 16 NX series Toptek Golden Sound 3in1 CD-ROM Device Drivers Toptek Golden Sound Pro 16 Toptek Golden Sound Pro 16 Plus Toptek Golden Sound Pro 2 Toptek Golden Sound Pro 3 Toptek Golden Sound Pro Deluxe Toptek Golden Sound Ver. 2.5Designer II Series Paradise / Western Digital VGA Standard Paradise/Western Digital Windows Accelerator Card PC Logic V1000 (Windows 3.0) PC Logic V2000 PC Logic VCOLOR Radius Multiview 24 Radius SVGA MultiView Radius XGA-2 S3 24-bit 911/928 Windows 3.1 driver S3 805 Windows 3.1 driver S3 911/924 Windows 3.1 driver S3 928 Windows 3.1 driver Sierra HiCOLOR Oak Sierra HiCOLOR S3 Sierra HiCOLOR Trident Sierra HiCOLOR Tseng Sierra HiCOLOR Western Digital Sigma Designs L-View PC Classic Sigma Designs Legend 24LX Sigma Designs Legend GX Sigma Designs Multimode 120 Sigma Designs Multimode 150 Sigma Designs SigmaVGA Legend I & II Sigma Designs WinStorm Sixgraph P9000 driver Sixgraph Wizard 924 driver STB Evolution VGA STB Horizon STB Pegasus VL STB PowerGraph VGA STB PowerGraph X24 STB PowerGraph/ERGO VGA STB Wind/X SuperMatch Spectrum (EISA boards) SuperMatch Spectrum (ISA boards) SuperMatch Spectrum (VESA boards) SuperMatch Thunder (EISA boards) SuperMatch Thunder (ISA boards) SuperMatch Thunder (VESA boards) Trident TVGA Tseng Labs ET3000 Tseng Labs ET4000 Tseng Labs ET4000/W32 and ET4000/AX Video 7 bottomLine topLine copyToClipBd copyDriver buttonClick nClick copyDriver Click this button to copy the directory path listed above to the Windows clipboard. statusBarText Copy &Path to Clipboard readingCD Reading driver information from the MPC Wizard CD. Please wait... If you're unsure of the driver you need, click this button to read info. from your sound device driver. It may help you to decide. statusBarText Driver &Info. bottomLine topLine Click the arrow button below for a list of sound drivers on the MPC Wizard CD. Then click the driver for your sound device. statusBarText Sound Device or Chipset Manufacturerrer bottomLine topLine After you've chosen a sound driver, the box below indicates the path where you can find it. Use the button to copy the path. statusBarText Directory Path Where You Can Find the Driver(s) bottomLine topLine wizPath This is the path where you can find the sound driver you've chosen from the above pop-down list. statusBarText [no driver selected]t_n_l bottomLine topLine Find a CD-ROM Driver selectDriver enterPage sDriverText sHasBeenClicked leavePage = comboBox "selectDriver" -- @ What bug workaround?: sendKeys("{ } 5",0) 4sDriverText, sHasBeenClicked )"+X* cdrom driverFileName 1845,1065,9300,4250 mainTextBounds scrollAmt Find a Driver parentSection showGoBackButton MPC Tests uSection F I N D A C D - R O M D R I V E R Directions Click the down-arrow button in the box below labeled CD-ROM Device Manufacturer. It will pop down a list of all the CD-ROM manufacturers whose drivers are on the MPC Wizard CD. Scroll through the list and click on the make and model your CD-ROM drive. The name of the drive you select will appear in the text box. Jot down the directory path indicated in the text box labeled Directory Path Where You Can Find the Driver(s). You can also copy the path to the Windows clipboard by clicking the Copy Path to Clipboard button. Then you can paste it into a text file editor like Windows Notepad, or into any application that accepts text. Run the Windows File Manager or an equivalent program. Locate the directory you jotted down. See if there is an informational text file such as README.TXT, README, READ.ME or the like included with your driver files. Read this text file to learn how to install your drivers. In some cases there may be multiple text files that you should read. Each driver is different. Unless a README.TXT file tells you otherwise, copy the files stored in your driver's directory to a floppy disk. If there are directories inside of the directory, and they are labeled disk01, disk02, etc., copy the files inside each one of these directories to separate floppy disks. Some setup programs require that the setup disk be placed in your A: drive, though most do not. Therefore, unless the total size of the files you are copying exceeds your floppy disk space, it's best to copy them to a disk that can be read from drive A:. You may be wondering why the MPC Wizard doesn't install the driver you need for you, or at least allow you to install it directly off of the CD. The reason is that, while many drivers share the same setup method, many do not. The present format allows us to frequently update the MPC Wizard's driver selection, as well as keep the price low. Drivers are provided by SoftKey International as a public service. If you encounter problems with any of them, please contact the specific manufacturer. The rights to the programs on the MPC Wizard CD are owned by their respective manufacturers and are provided "AS IS" exclusively for their customers. They may not be redistributed without the express written permission of the manufacturer. SoftKey International disclaims all warranties, expressed or implied, including merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. page 1 of 100 selectDriver sDriverText false sHasBeenClicked enterDropDown sHasBeenClicked leaveDropDown sDriverText false sHasBeenClicked mouseLeave following 3 handlers are needed around a bug that comboBox even user moves mouse off enterDropDown 4sDriverText, sHasBeenClicked leaveDropDown Click the arrow button for a list of CD-ROM drivers on the MPC Wizard CD. Then click the driver for your CD-ROM device. statusBarText [no driver selected]435, and 535W Chinon, Models 430, 435, and 535 Pioneer Multichanger Aztech Multimedia Pro 16L Aztech Systems Multimedia Pro 16 Aztech Systems Sound Galaxy Business Audio Aztech Systems Sound Galaxy BX II Aztech Systems Sound Galaxy NX Pro 16 Aztech Systems Sound Galaxy Pro Cardinal Sound Studio Covox Laser Digital Media Concept 2.0 Laser Digital Media Concept Pro Media Vision Audio Port Media Vision Pro Audio Spectrum (Rev. C Boards) Media Vision Pro Audio Spectrum (Rev. D Boards) Media Vision Pro Audio Studio Media Vision Pro Sonic 16 Media Vision Thunder & Lightning Media Vision Thunderboard MediaSonic Toptek Golden Sound Pro 16 Toptek Golden Sound Pro 2 Toptek Golden Sound Pro 3 Toptek Golden Sound Pro Deluxe Toptek Golden Sound Ver. 2.5rus Logic 5402/5420 Cirrus Logic 5422/5424 Cirrus Logic 5426/28 Cirrus Logic 642X Diamond SpeedSTAR 24 Diamond Speedstar 24X Diamond SpeedStar Pro Diamond SpeedSTAR VGA Diamond Stealth 24 Diamond Stealth 32 Diamond Stealth Pro Diamond Stealth VRAM Diamond Viper VLB Everex EV634 Genoa 1MB VGA Genoa 6000 VGA Genoa 7900 VGA Genoa 8000 VGA Genoa 8500 VGA Genoa 8500 VL VGA Genoa 8700 VGA Genoa 8900 VL/PCI VGA Genoa Multimedia VGA Genoa Windows VGA 24 Hercules Hercules Chrome Hercules Dynamite Hercules Graphite 1MB VRAM Hercules Graphite 2MB VRAM Hercules Superstation 3D Hercules Superstation XP Matrox Illuminator-16 Matrox Impression Matrox Impression 1024 Matrox Impression Ultra Media Vision Pro Graphics 1024 Media Vision Pro Graphics 1280 Media Vision Thunder & Lightning NCR VGA New Media Graphics Super VideoWindows Oak Technology OTI-067/077 Oak Technology OTI-087 Rev. B/D Ver. 1.6 Oak Technology OTI-087 Rev. X Oak Technology OTI-087 Windows for Pen Orchid Fahrenheit Orchid ProDesigner II Series Paradise / Western Digital VGA Standard Paradise/Western Digital Windows Accelerator Card PC Logic V1000 (Windows 3.0) PC Logic V2000 PC Logic VCOLOR Radius Multiview 24 Radius SVGA MultiView Radius XGA-2 S3 24-bit 911/928 Windows 3.1 driver S3 805 Windows 3.1 driver S3 911/924 Windows 3.1 driver S3 928 Windows 3.1 driver Sierra HiCOLOR Oak Sierra HiCOLOR S3 Sierra HiCOLOR Trident Sierra HiCOLOR Tseng Sierra HiCOLOR Western Digital Sigma Designs L-View PC Classic Sigma Designs Legend 24LX Sigma Designs Legend GX Sigma Designs Multimode 120 Sigma Designs Multimode 150 Sigma Designs SigmaVGA Legend I & II Sigma Designs WinStorm Sixgraph P9000 driver Sixgraph Wizard 924 driver STB Evolution VGA STB Horizon STB Pegasus VL STB PowerGraph VGA STB PowerGraph X24 STB PowerGraph/ERGO VGA STB Wind/X SuperMatch Spectrum (EISA boards) SuperMatch Spectrum (ISA boards) SuperMatch Spectrum (VESA boards) SuperMatch Thunder (EISA boards) SuperMatch Thunder (ISA boards) SuperMatch Thunder (VESA boards) Trident TVGA Tseng Labs ET3000 Tseng Labs ET4000 Tseng Labs ET4000/W32 and ET4000/AX Video 7 bottomLine topLine copyToClipBd copyDriver buttonClick nClick copyDriver Click this button to copy the directory path listed above to the Windows clipboard. statusBarText Copy &Path to Clipboard readingCD Reading driver information from the MPC Wizard CD. Please wait... Click the arrow button below for a list of CD-ROM drivers on the MPC Wizard CD. Then click the driver for your CD-ROM device. statusBarText CD-ROM Device Manufactureranufacturerrr bottomLine topLine After you've chosen a CD-ROM driver, the box below indicates the path where you can find it. Use the button to copy the path. statusBarText Directory Path Where You Can Find the Driver(s) bottomLine topLine wizPath This is the path where you can find the CD-ROM driver you've chosen from the above pop-down list. statusBarText [no driver selected]nonr bottomLine topLine Multimedia Applications Multimedia Applications uSection 1845,1065,9300,4125 mainTextBounds scrollAmt M U L T I M E D I A A P P L I C A T I O N S The MPC Wizard CD includes other multimedia applications for you to enjoy. The Best of MediaClips includes photos, sounds, and movies from SoftKey International's MediaClips series of CD-ROMs. The MediaClips series offer you quality entertainment and content at affordable prices. The finest artists provide their best work for you to use in your multimedia presentations royalty-free. The SoftKey Product Catalog is your multimedia introduction to the SoftKey family's line of affordable software....... page 1 of 2 Click this button to launch the Best of Media Clips application included on the MPC Wizard CD. statusBarText The Best of MediaClips Click this button to launch the SoftKey Product Catalog application included on the MPC Wizard CD. statusBarText The SoftKey Product Catalog minimize When checked, this button minimizes the MPC Wizard after you launch a multimedia app, then restores it when you exit the app. statusBarText Minimize MPC Wizard after Launching App statusBarText The Best of MediaClips -- We eliminated the Best MediaClips, so there's no need separate MM apps. If we zeventually use , change below similar that contained SoftKey Catalog buttonClick "This feature xyet implemented." -- --@ IMPLEMENT THIS FOR RELEASED VERSION!: -- -- runApp "catalog.tbk","The Product Click this button to launch the SoftKey Product Catalog application included on the MPC Wizard CD. statusBarText The SoftKey Product Catalog minimize When checked, this button minimizes the MPC Wizard after you launch a multimedia app, then restores it when you exit the app. statusBarText Minimize MPC Wizard after Launching App Test Results 8<8t8 DNE`F The color shows whether you passed or failed this test. Click it to view details of test. Right-click it to get a menu of relevant tasks. statusBarText Test Results uSection waveAudio08m11 waveAudio08m22 waveAudio08m44 waveAudio08s11 waveAudio08s22 waveAudio08s44 waveAudio16m11 waveAudio16m22 waveAudio16m44 waveAudio16s11 waveAudio16s22 waveAudio16s44 cdAudio midiAudioMelodic midiAudioPercussive screenResolution screenColorDepth drawDib01Bit40noPalette drawDib01Bit100noPalette drawDib04Bit40noPalette drawDib04Bit100noPalette drawDib08Bit40noPalette drawDib08Bit100noPalette MSCDEXversion 3strokeAccessWithoutSD tranRate100withoutSD tranRate60withoutSD tranRate40withoutSD tranRate100WithSD tranRate60withSD tranRate40withSD vfwMsv1 vfwIntelIndeo vfwCinepak mpegVideo uaTestGroupList T E S T R E S U L T SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS .&+ +E .&+ +E MsetAllButtonColors false W@buttonChosen MPC 1 .buttonChosen sTestRunning MPC 2 buttonDown buttonClick Click this button to see at a glance whether your system meets MPC Level 1 specifications for the tests you've run so far. statusBarText MPC Level &1 MPC 2 MPC 1 .buttonChosen sTestRunning buttonDown buttonClick Click this button to see at a glance whether your system meets MPC Level 2 specifications for the tests you've run so far. statusBarText MPC Level &2 Choose an MPC level, then choose a filter for that level. The at-a-glance test result boxes below will change colors accordingly. statusBarText Select At-A-Glance Results to View: .&+ +E .&+ +E MsetAllButtonColors sTestRunning buttonClick requirements Click this button to limit your at-a-glance view of test results to the minimum requirements for the MPC level you've chosen. statusBarText Requirements &Only recommendations Click this button to include in your at-a-glance view the requirements AND recommendations for the MPC level you've chosen. statusBarText Requirements && Re&commendations runAllTests runAllTests sTestRunning buttonClick Click this button to automatically run each MPC test on this screen in succession. statusBarText Run &All Tests go_detailedResults rightButtonDown .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E closeGenMsgViewer There are no test results to view. 17,19,10 svResultsDirty writeTestResults Test Results List clock scrollingTextViewer showGenMsgViewer sTestRunning Please wait... detailedResults Getting Test Results. buttonClick Click this button to view, print, or save a detailed list of the results for all the tests performed. statusBarText Detailed &List of All Results... .&+ +E .&+ +E Are you sure you want to delete all test results? svResultsDirty clearAllResults sTestRunning There are no test results to delete. buttonClick Click this button to delete all test results. statusBarText D&elete All Test Results testResultsHelp .&+ +E .&+ +E .&+ +E loGenViewer scrollingTextViewer Test Results Help sTestRunning helpText testResultsHelp buttonClick Click this button to learn about the Test Results screen. statusBarText Test Results Screen &Help... CD-ROMssssss SOUND Stereo 8-Bit 16-Bit GRAPHICS CD AUDIO RESOLUTION COLORS SPEED without SmartDrivehe SmartDriveeee AVERAGE ACCESS MSCDEX VERSION TRANSFER RATE MOTION VIDEO 1-Bit 4-Bit 8-Bit Each box in this section represents one sound test. The color of each box indicates at a glance the result of that test. statusBarText runWaveAudioTest reRunTest waveAudio08m11 Wave Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 8-Bit, 11kHz, mono wave audio test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 11.025 kHz waveAudio08s11 BK^KN Wave Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 8-Bit, 11kHz, stereo wave audio test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 11.025 kHz pLjM~M waveAudio08s44 Wave Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 8-Bit, 44kHz, stereo wave audio test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 44 kHz waveAudio08s22 Wave Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 8-Bit, 22kHz, stereo wave audio test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 22.5 kHz waveAudio08m44 Wave Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 8-Bit, 44kHz, mono wave audio test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 44 kHz DS>TRT waveAudio08m22 Wave Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 8-Bit, 22kHz, mono wave audio test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 22.5 kHz waveAudio16m11 Wave Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 16-Bit, 11kHz, mono wave audio test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 11.025 kHz waveAudio16s11 >YZYN Wave Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 16-Bit, 11kHz, stereo wave audio test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 11.025 kHz nZh[|[ waveAudio16s44 Wave Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 16-Bit, 44kHz, stereo wave audio test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 44 kHz waveAudio16s22 Wave Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 16-Bit, 22kHz, stereo wave audio test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 22.5 kHz 4_.`B` waveAudio16m44 Wave Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 16-Bit, 44kHz, mono wave audio test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 44 kHz waveAudio16m22 Wave Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 16-Bit, 22kHz, mono wave audio test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 22.5 kHz cdAudio runCDaudioTest stereo getCDdevice reRunTest CD Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the stereo CD audio test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText midiAudioMelodic .&+ +E .&+ +E MIDI Audio Tests hplayMidi svPatchNum midiAudioMelodic YpLastPatchNum reRunTest 0iLiN MIDI Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the MIDI audio music test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText Music JjDkvl midiAudioPercussive .&+ +E .&+ +E MIDI Audio Tests hplayMidi pLastKeyNum svKeyNum midiAudioPercussive reRunTest MIDI Audio Tests testScreen This box's color shows the percussive MIDI test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText Percussion Each box in this section represents one graphics test. The color of each box indicates at a glance the result of that test. statusBarText .&+ +E .&+ +E runDrawDibTest rerunTest drawDib01Bit100noPalette Graphics Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 1-bit, 100% CPU graphics speed test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 100% CPU 4r.sJs drawDib01Bit40noPalette Graphics Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 1-bit, 40% CPU graphics speed test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 40% CPU drawDib04Bit40noPalette Graphics Tests testScreen This box's color shows the 4-bit, 40% CPU graphics speed test result. Click it for test details. Right-click it for more options. statusBarText 40% CPU drawDib04Bit100noPalette -1 -- down | = 0 lockScreen focusWindow = textToClipboard( = keyEnter buttonClick B"done" helpText Introduction The MPC Marketing Council issued two sets of performance guidelines for multimedia PCs--one for MPC Level 1-compatibility, and another for Level 2-compatibility. Each of these sets of guidelines includes both minimum requirements as well as recommendations. The MPC Wizard Test Results screen uses colors to indicate test results. This lets you see at a glance just how well your own system stacks up against several of the MPC Council's requirements and recommendations. A large amount of information is packed into the Test Results screen. If you're a multimedia PC pro, you'll appreciate this. If you're not familiar with multimedia and the MPC specifications we suggest you read the information contained in the Wizard's What's an MPC section, then go through the CD-ROM, Graphics, Sound, and Motion Video parts of the MPC Tests section before using the Test Results screen. Selecting the At-A-Glance Results to View The buttons at the top of the Test Results screen let you toggle your at-a-glance, color-coded view of test results. Click the MPC Level 1 button to compare your test results to the Level 1 standard, or click the MPC Level 2 button to compare your test results to the Level 2 standard. A check mark indicates the level you are viewing. Click the Requirements Only filter to compare your test results to the MPC requirements for the level you've chosen. Click the Requirements & Recommendations filter to compare your test results to both the requirements and the recommendations for the level you've chosen. Reading the Test Results Screen The tests are divided into four groups: Sound, Graphics, CD-ROM, and Motion Video. Within each group is a set of colored boxes. Each box represents one test. The color of the box indicates the result of the test. Green means that your system meets or exceeds the specifications for the MPC Level and filter you've chosen. Red indicates that your system falls below that specification. Gray indicates that there is no MPC requirement or recommendation for the test at the Level and filter you've chosen (though there may be at a different level or with the other filter). Note that features which the MPC Council considers "optional" or "desirable" are not included in the Wizard's definition of "recommended." Mauve indicates that the test has not been run yet this session, or that you deleted the test using the Delete All Test Results button. Yellow indicates that a test is in progress. You can abort some tests by pressing the Esc key on your keyboard. With others, you must wait until the test concludes. The message window that appears at the bottom right of your screen when you run a test will inform you when it is possible to abort the test. You will probably find, when toggling between MPC levels or filters, that several of the test boxes will change color. For instance, if you are running Windows in 256-color mode you may discover that when you choose Level 1 with the Requirements Only filter, the test box representing the Colors test (in the Graphics section) is green. But when you switch to Level 2 using the Requirements Only filter, the box turns red. That's because Level 1 specifications require only 16 colors, whereas Level 2 specifications require 65,536 colors. The test result hasn't changed. What's changed is the definition of "passing" and "failing." You will also notice a change of color in the Colors test box if your system is set to 16 colors and you toggle between Level 1 with the Requirements Only filter and Level 1 with the Requirements and Recommendations filter. In this case the test box will be green with the former set of choices, but red with the latter set of choices. That's because, though only 16 colors are required for Level 1 compatibility, 256 colors are recommended. Please note that tests which measure performance levels are approximate. If your CD-ROM drive, for instance, measures 299 KB per second instead of 300 KB per second on the Data Transfer Rate test @ 100% of CPU time, the drive may still be MPC Level 2 compliant and, in any case, you're unlikely to notice any performance degradation. Clicking a Test Box for More Options To get details about the test (like the exact result, or the MPC specification for that feature), click the test box with your left mousebutton. Clicking a test box with your right mousebutton causes a pop-up menu to appear. Click View Test Results (available when the test has already been run) to get the details of the test. This is equivalent to clicking the test box with the left mousebutton as described above. Click Go To _________ Screen to be brought to the place in the MPC Tests section of the Wizard that discusses the test in detail. The exact wording of this menu item will change depending upon the test. To return to the Test Results screen, click the button. Click Go to _________ Troubleshooting Tips if you are experiencing difficulties with the test. You will be brought to the appropriate Troubleshooting Tips screen in the MPC Tests section of the Wizard. The exact wording of this menu item will change depending upon the test. To return to the Test Results screen, click the button. Click Re-run Test to run the test again. Doing this will delete the previous result. If the test hasn't been run yet, this menu item will say Run Test. Click Cancel if you don't want to do anything. This will dismiss the pop-up menu. You can also dismiss the pop-up menu by clicking anywhere outside of the menu (just be sure not to accidently click on any active button). The Buttons at the Lower-Right Corner of the Screen Click the Re-Run All Tests button to run the entire suite of tests again. Doing this will erase the previous set of test results. If the entire test suite hasn't been run before during the current MPC Wizard session, this button will say Run All Tests. Click the Delete All Test Results button to erase the entire set of test results. Doing this will turn the color of all the buttons to mauve, as if no test had been run this MPC Wizard session. Click the Detailed List of All Results button to view a list of all the test results for all the tests run during the current MPC Wizard session, or since you last deleted the test results. You are given options to print the list or save it to a text file. Click the Test Results Screen Help button to bring up the help text you are now viewing.elp button to bring up the help text you are now viewing.ptions to print the list or save it to a text file. Click the Test Results Screen Help button to bring up the help text you are now viewing.list or save it to a text file. Click the Test Results Screen Help button to bring up the help text you are now viewing. helpText textToClipboard testResultsHelp pCtrl keyDown .&+ +E buttonClick C&lose testResultsHelp pCtrl keyDown = keyEnter buttonClick B"done" = "testResultsHelp" -- The "helpText" - 13 > -1 -- down lockScreen focusWindow = pCtrl textToClipboard( C&lose vfwStats keyDown = keyEnter buttonClick B"done" Movie type: Size of Movie: Recorded Color Depth: No. of Frames in Entire Movie: Frame No. You Stopped At: No. of Frames Actually Displayed: Recorded Frame Rate: Actual Avg. Frame Rate: vfwStats Intel Indeo 3 240 by 180 pixels 24-bit 15 fps 15 fpspsss moviePlayed The movie played. No frames were skipped by Video for Windows.60 by 120 pixels 8-bit 15 fpsps Performance Statistics chooseSpecs Continue enterPage cancel keyDown B"Continue" buttonClick continue .&+ +E genericViewer1 getMpcLevel uRetValue getRequirements buttonClick MPC 1 MPC 2 getMpcLevel requirements recommendations getRequirements nClick Zstack lskRetValue targetWindow = "genericViewer1" getMpcLevel() getRequirements() uRetValue B"MPC 1" B"requirements" "recommendations" Con&tinue cancel .&+ +E cancel genericViewer1 uRetValue buttonClick onClick Zstack lskRetValue targetWindow = "genericViewer1" uRetValue &Cancel MPC 1 Click this button to limit your at-a-glance view of test results to the minimum requirements for the MPC level you've chosen. statusBarText MPC Level &1 MPC 2 Click this button to include in your at-a-glance view the requirements AND recommendations for the MPC level you've chosen. statusBarText MPC Level &2 requirements Click this button to limit your at-a-glance view of test results to the minimum requirements for the MPC level you've chosen. statusBarText Requirements &Only recommendations Click this button to include in your at-a-glance view the requirements AND recommendations for the MPC level you've chosen. statusBarText &Requirements && Recommendations The Test Results screen will be displayed while the MPC Wizard tests are running. The Test Results screen uses colors to indicate test results. This lets you see at a glance just how well your own system stacks up against several of the MPC Council's requirements and recommendations. After each test concludes, the pass/fail result for that test will appear on the screen. Please select below the set of MPC Council specifications you want to view while the tests are running. Regardless of which specs you choose, you can easily switch views once the tests conclude without having to re-run the tests. 15 fpsps Performance Statistics