...but I'll get to that in a moment, because first I want to complain a while about what got me to thinking of them in the first place.
Dad's office recently had to replace three computers. The hard drives had to be destroyed, but one of the computers is going to his grandchildren. I've put in a spare drive and reinstalled Windows from the restore disc that came with the machine when it was new... but it won't recognize its own, original, internal, ethernet card which was working perfectly up until the computer was shut down four days ago. Claims there's no driver for it on the CD, and wants to search the internet to find one. (And, of course, if it could do that, it wouldn't NEED to.)
Off to Dell's site, which needs either a special code (I found what looked like one, but they wouldn't take it) or the model number. Unfortunately, the ONLY model number on the machine is "DHM." And DHM is not one of the way too many choices on their site. Searching Google, I find some message board or other answering a similar problem with a link to download from Intel... turns out the only thing I can find there that could possibly be any use since I DON'T HAVE A MODEL NUMBER is downloading a whole CD's worth and hoping it's in there. The CD is listed as being 103 MB, but the download repeatedly quits at 2 or 3 claiming to be finished.
Which has given me time to look through the license agreement, still on the screen. And what I see puzzles me. Why on earth would device drivers, which can be downloaded by anyone, anonymously, for free, as many times as they wish, and which are useless without the matching hardware anyway, come with a license warning not to make copies? Why would they even care, other than not having to supply bandwidth if someone only downloads once?
Dad's office recently had to replace three computers. The hard drives had to be destroyed, but one of the computers is going to his grandchildren. I've put in a spare drive and reinstalled Windows from the restore disc that came with the machine when it was new... but it won't recognize its own, original, internal, ethernet card which was working perfectly up until the computer was shut down four days ago. Claims there's no driver for it on the CD, and wants to search the internet to find one. (And, of course, if it could do that, it wouldn't NEED to.)
Off to Dell's site, which needs either a special code (I found what looked like one, but they wouldn't take it) or the model number. Unfortunately, the ONLY model number on the machine is "DHM." And DHM is not one of the way too many choices on their site. Searching Google, I find some message board or other answering a similar problem with a link to download from Intel... turns out the only thing I can find there that could possibly be any use since I DON'T HAVE A MODEL NUMBER is downloading a whole CD's worth and hoping it's in there. The CD is listed as being 103 MB, but the download repeatedly quits at 2 or 3 claiming to be finished.
Which has given me time to look through the license agreement, still on the screen. And what I see puzzles me. Why on earth would device drivers, which can be downloaded by anyone, anonymously, for free, as many times as they wish, and which are useless without the matching hardware anyway, come with a license warning not to make copies? Why would they even care, other than not having to supply bandwidth if someone only downloads once?
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