** Reply to message from [EMAIL PROTECTED] on Thu, 21 Sep 2000 06:01:08 -0700


> I was curious about this when with OS/2, the Win-OS2 media player would not
> stop when I gave it the three-finger-salute while it was still playing a
> CD-ROM, that is, until it began to re-boot.  When it re-boots, the microcode
> should get replaced during the bootstrap process.

That's got nothing to do with CPU microcode.  It has to do with the fact that
the sound card and the CPU do no work when playing audio from a CD-ROM.  The
CD-ROM drive does all the work - it extracts the audio data from the CD,
converts it to analog, and pipes out a cable which plugs into your sound card.
All your sound card does is pipe out to your speakers.  In order to stop a CD,
you need to 1) stop the CD-ROM drive (reset the drive) or 2) mute the CD input
(reset the sound card).



-- 
Timur Tabi - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Interactive Silicon - http://www.interactivesi.com

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