Why does it take so long to boot? If I use a system restore point to return to a system state before the MX212 drivers were installed, but leave the MX212 still hooked up, then it no longer hangs during the boot. It asks for the driver, but I hit cancel, and then it boots normally, without the long delay. It boots exactly as it should, taking less than 30 seconds. Can anyone please explain what is causing this problem and how to fix it? This is a brand-new computer that I just finished building last week, with a 3.0 GHz 800 FSB P4 CPU, MSI 875P Neo motherboard, ATI 9800 Pro graphics card, Sound Blaster Audigy 2, 80 GB Maxtor HD, 52x CD-RW, DVD-RW+RW, 7-in-1 firewire internal card reader , 1 GB of Corsair XMS PC3500 RAM, running Win XP Pro. I can provide other stats about this computer if needed.
My guess would be that the driver is not entirely compatible with Win XP Pro, or the driver is conflicting with some other software that initializes during the early phase of boot up. The driver that was included on the CD that came with the MX212 did not work. The second driver (which activates the virtual COM port) did not install correctly and caused the entire OS to crash when I rebooted. Technical support at Matrix Orbital told me to download a different driver from the forums web site, and then the second driver installed correctly and the computer was able to boot without crashing... it just takes over 9 minutes to boot now. Is it possible not all of the (Win XP) bugs have been worked out of the drivers yet? At one point I thought it might have something to do with LCDC, but then I noticed that this booting delay occurs before LCDC loads... and happens whether or not LCDC or any of its plugins are started.
Does anyone else have this same problem: an abnormally long delay caused by the MX2xx drivers on a Windows XP system? If so, how can it be fixed? If not, any suggestions? Is this problem isolated to only Windows XP systems?
Thanks,
Chad
