Archive for August, 2007

Removing Windows Live E-mail on WM6

Saturday, August 25th, 2007

With Windows Mobile 6, you have the option of using the built in MSN messenger to talk to your buddies. A lot of people, including myself, don’t use Hotmail based e-mail services, and an unfortunate side effect of even trying out the built in MSN messenger is the addition of “Windows Live E-mail” in the messaging application. On the T-Mobile Dash, when you use the right softkey to pull up options such as “Settings” and “Delete”, the “Delete” option is grayed out, so its almost as if you’re stuck with that.

Thankfully, deleting a registry key fixes the “issue” some of us face and removes the Windows Live E-mail option from the messaging application.

Using Total Commander (or any other registry editor), find the following key:

\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Inbox\Svc\Windows Live

T-Mobile Dash Running Total Commander
T-Mobile Dash - Total Commander Registry
Note: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE may show up as HKLM on some devices, like the Dash.

Delete the key, and restart the messaging application. The “Windows Live E-mail” option should now be gone. Note that it will return once you try using MSN Messenger again (or any other Windows Live service built in), so I recommend using something like Shape Services IM+ for an IM client instead.

iPod giving you disk use problems?

Friday, August 24th, 2007

For a while, I had a problem using my iPod Video 80 GB as a hard drive on my laptop. At first, it worked perfectly fine, but after I hooked it up to a friend’s computer to share some files (not music, and he runs Windows 2000), I couldn’t seem to access it again on my laptop. I run Windows XP Home on the laptop. Keep in mind that I could still access my songs using iTunes, I just could not use the iPod as an external hard drive (disk use, as Apple calls it). I kept getting “E:/ Access is Denied” when trying to view using My Computer.

I could, however, access the iPod as a hard drive on my PC. My PC was using Windows XP Professional edition, so I wasn’t really sure what the issue was. I decided to call Apple’s tech support, and after spending a half hour on the phone with them they told me that the issue was with my computer. Funny, seeing as how I could use my friend’s iPod as a hard drive just fine on my laptop, I just could not use my own. After coming to the conclusion that Apple’s tech support sucks, I decided to find another solution.

At this point, my PC was starting to exhibit the same problems as my laptop did in the beginning – at first, the iPod would be seen as a hard drive, but then it could not be accessed. I could still bypass it by a simple trick using Windows Explorer, which I won’t go into detail with (unless someone wants me to). Now it was really getting to my nerves, as I had files on there that I really needed. Using my Windows Explorer trick I backed up those files, however another issue popped up – what about my music?

Now I was really frustrated, as I have over 30 GB of music on my iPod, and although I had most of it backed up on my computer I wasn’t completely sure I had it all. Thankfully, after a little bit of research, I found YamiPod – Yet Another iPod Manager. Using this simple (but spectacular) program, I was able to back up all my music to my computer.

After completing the backup (which took a little while, about 45 minutes to an hour), I restored the iPod to factory condition using the latest iPod firmware available through iTunes. I decided to restore it using my PC and test it on my laptop to see if it now worked as a portable hard drive again. And it did! I was extremely excited that it started working at this point, so I loaded up all my music back onto the iPod and all the backed up files. Several weeks later, its still running great with no problems.

Looks like I won’t be hooking up this iPod to any computer other than mine again (or call Apple’s tech support again)