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Nan
December 5th 03, 08:57 PM
To restore Default Beep you have to hack the registry.
If you have the nerve. Sorry. But there is an easy way
to do it.

First, set up a brand new user account on XP, open that
account, and check the sound menu. If you find Default
Beep, you're ready to proceed.

Second, select the Default Beep sound event and change it
to something with a really obnoxious name, like Jungle
Default.

Next, go the Start menu and run REGEDIT. Click open the
folder for HKEY_CURRENT_USER

Then, using the drop-down menus at the top, select EDIT -
FIND and search for the obnoxious name. Copy down
EXACTLY the names of the folders and subfolders where you
found it. It's probably in AppEvents - Schemes - Apps -
.Default - .Default - .Current

Note that the .Default and .Current folders have a dot at
the beginning of the name. There are probably TWO
folders under .Default - .Default, named .Current
and .Default - write down EXACTLY everything in those two
folders, including the data values.

Now, exit Registry Editor and the user account. Switch
to the User Account with the Missing Default Beep.

Start REGEDIT and go to HKEY_CURRENT_USER. The .Default -
.Default - .Current sub-folder will be missing. You
have to right-click the location where .Default -
.Default - .Current belongs, select NEW KEY, and add
back all the missing sub-folders.

REMEMBER: The folder locations and names (aka "keys") and
data values you are adding MUST EXACTLY match what is in
the other user account. Otherwise, well.........
(Remember, this is free advice you are taking at your own
risk.)

Finally, on the right side of the screen, under Name-Type-
Data, right-click to bring up MODIFY and change the data
values to EXACTLY what you wrote down from the other user
account.

You're done. Exit Regedit, go to Control Panel, select
the sound events, and if you have done everything right,
you will find Default Beep restored to your system.


>-----Original Message-----
>I had to do a full restore of my system - operator
error,
>don't ask - and when it came back all seems fine except
>there is no "default beep" in the sounds table. All the
>other 'stuff' is there but no default beep. Now my
>computer flashes at me when a default occurs but there
is
>no sound associated with it.
>
>I find no option to add or remove sounds so I don't know
>where it went.
>
>Ideas?
>.
>

Dan (Still going in circles)
December 5th 03, 08:58 PM
Wouldn't it have been easier to export the string to the "C:\Documents
and Settings\All Users\Desktop" location and the go to the user screen
and double click on the export which will import the screen to the
user's registry.
Just a thought.


Dan (Still going in circles)



On Wed, 27 Aug 2003 18:34:54 -0700, "Nan" > wrote:

>To restore Default Beep you have to hack the registry.
>If you have the nerve. Sorry. But there is an easy way
>to do it.
>
>First, set up a brand new user account on XP, open that
>account, and check the sound menu. If you find Default
>Beep, you're ready to proceed.
>
>Second, select the Default Beep sound event and change it
>to something with a really obnoxious name, like Jungle
>Default.
>
>Next, go the Start menu and run REGEDIT. Click open the
>folder for HKEY_CURRENT_USER
>
>Then, using the drop-down menus at the top, select EDIT -
>FIND and search for the obnoxious name. Copy down
>EXACTLY the names of the folders and subfolders where you
>found it. It's probably in AppEvents - Schemes - Apps -
> .Default - .Default - .Current
>
>Note that the .Default and .Current folders have a dot at
>the beginning of the name. There are probably TWO
>folders under .Default - .Default, named .Current
>and .Default - write down EXACTLY everything in those two
>folders, including the data values.
>
>Now, exit Registry Editor and the user account. Switch
>to the User Account with the Missing Default Beep.
>
>Start REGEDIT and go to HKEY_CURRENT_USER. The .Default -
> .Default - .Current sub-folder will be missing. You
>have to right-click the location where .Default -
> .Default - .Current belongs, select NEW KEY, and add
>back all the missing sub-folders.
>
>REMEMBER: The folder locations and names (aka "keys") and
>data values you are adding MUST EXACTLY match what is in
>the other user account. Otherwise, well.........
>(Remember, this is free advice you are taking at your own
>risk.)
>
>Finally, on the right side of the screen, under Name-Type-
>Data, right-click to bring up MODIFY and change the data
>values to EXACTLY what you wrote down from the other user
>account.
>
>You're done. Exit Regedit, go to Control Panel, select
>the sound events, and if you have done everything right,
>you will find Default Beep restored to your system.
>
>
>>-----Original Message-----
>>I had to do a full restore of my system - operator
>error,
>>don't ask - and when it came back all seems fine except
>>there is no "default beep" in the sounds table. All the
>>other 'stuff' is there but no default beep. Now my
>>computer flashes at me when a default occurs but there
>is
>>no sound associated with it.
>>
>>I find no option to add or remove sounds so I don't know
>>where it went.
>>
>>Ideas?
>>.
>>

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