Toshiba A9-S9013 User Manual page 182

A9-s9013 user's guide
Hide thumbs Also See for A9-S9013:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

182
If Something Goes Wrong
Resolving a hardware conflict
Direct Memory Access
Similarly, the data required by the device is stored in a specific
place or address in memory called the Direct Memory Access
(DMA). The DMA provides a dedicated channel for adapter cards
to bypass the microprocessor and access memory directly. If two or
more devices use the same DMA, the data required by one device
overwrites the data required by the other, causing a hardware
conflict.
Plug and Play
With Plug and Play and the operating system, avoiding hardware
conflicts is easy. Plug and Play is a computer standard that helps the
system BIOS (basic input/output system) and the operating system
to automatically assign system resources to Plug and Play-
compliant devices. In theory, if every device connected to the
computer is Plug and Play-compliant, no two devices will compete
for the same system resources. Plug in the device and turn on your
computer. The operating system is automatically set up to
accommodate the new device.
If you install an older (legacy) device that the operating system
cannot recognize, the operating system may have difficulty
assigning resources to it. As a result, a hardware conflict can occur.
Resolving conflicts
There are several things you can do to resolve hardware conflicts:
Get the most recent drivers from the manufacturer.
Disable the device.
For an older device, remove it from the computer.
Disable another system component and use its resources for the
new device. See
page
Reconfigure the device so that its requirements do not conflict.
Refer to the device's documentation for instructions about
changing settings on the device.
"Fixing a problem with Device Manager" on
183.

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents