I've also had that same message, "System restore unsuccessful, no changes
were made to your system".  Running system restore in safe mode can
sometimes get around that problem, it has for me.  If you don't already
know, you get into safe mode by pumping the f8 key during the boot-up.

Check to see if system restore actually has any restore points recorded.  I
once had a malware problem that caused previous restore points to be
deleted, making the problem difficult to recover from.  A reinstall was
needed IIRC   >:(

Also, Windows updates can at times conflict with hardware (in my
experience).  See if "Add or Remove Programs" lists a patch installed within
the last few days, or go to Microsoft Update and click on "Review your
update history" to see if anything was added recently.

Good luck with a solution.

Regards,
Anthony Farr

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of John
Celio

(snip)

> But the easiest thing to do is  restore Windows to a previous restore 
> point

Tried that.  Tried three days, five days, and a week back, but every time it

came back saying "System restore unsucessfull, no changes were made to your 
system" between that date and now.  The only other thing I can think of is 
that Windows' basic USB drivers may have been corrupted, but I don't know 
how to fix that.

John


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