Windows is great because if you plug your mouse into one USB port then maybe you move the mouse to another, it completely forgets that mouse ever existed and is like “setting up device!”
Bro, you know what this is.
It sure is great. If I remember correctly, there was a Windows 95 error saying "keyboard not found, press F2 to continue."
No it wasn't just win95 but also IBM DOS and BIOS.
Keyboard not found, press F2 to continue asks the users to either plug in a keyboard and the press F2 on that one to continue or press F2 on an unrecognised keyboard so that the OS could pick it up.
It would then reload the driver's for the PS/2 keyboard and continue as normal.
well technically.... USB initialization isn't that simple, when you change which port it's plugged into, it's numerated under that new memory space, so from the computers perspective, it's a different number, it's a different device.
Is that just obfuscated on other platforms (like MacOS)? I don't think I've ever had a Mac get "confused" by a device by changing its port.
Usually you have a vendor and a device id to identify the connected device on the bus
You're right though, that in every different port it will get its own memory allocated an so on (at least I also believe that), but that's no reason to not identify the already known device
That's very unlikely to happen. Once the driver is installed via Windows update it doesn't magically uninstall itself.
"There's a problem with your USB storage device"
Continues to work just fine, just as if there is no problem
"You need to format your USB drive" when there's a perfectly usable FAT partition, which just happens to not be the first partition on the drive
Windows is great because if you plug your mouse into one USB port then maybe you move the mouse to another, it completely forgets that mouse ever existed and is like “setting up device!”
Bro, you know what this is.
It sure is great. If I remember correctly, there was a Windows 95 error saying "keyboard not found, press F2 to continue."
No it wasn't just win95 but also IBM DOS and BIOS.
Keyboard not found, press F2 to continue asks the users to either plug in a keyboard and the press F2 on that one to continue or press F2 on an unrecognised keyboard so that the OS could pick it up.
It would then reload the driver's for the PS/2 keyboard and continue as normal.
well technically.... USB initialization isn't that simple, when you change which port it's plugged into, it's numerated under that new memory space, so from the computers perspective, it's a different number, it's a different device.
Is that just obfuscated on other platforms (like MacOS)? I don't think I've ever had a Mac get "confused" by a device by changing its port.
Usually you have a vendor and a device id to identify the connected device on the bus
You're right though, that in every different port it will get its own memory allocated an so on (at least I also believe that), but that's no reason to not identify the already known device
That's very unlikely to happen. Once the driver is installed via Windows update it doesn't magically uninstall itself.