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I've tried what has been recommended on that page, and I can't get windows to detect the player, and the player itself does not respond to anything I try with it. The only thing that is noticeable is that the wheel light is on, but the screen stays black.
Quote from: Johnv on November 14, 2008, 03:55:08 PMI've tried what has been recommended on that page, and I can't get windows to detect the player, and the player itself does not respond to anything I try with it. The only thing that is noticeable is that the wheel light is on, but the screen stays black.This means you are in manufactoring mode. If you deleted both partitions on the device, this is probably where you will end up.
Why can't you boot from a CD? You might also be able to run a virtualized linux to use e200 tool.
The show stopper is that you don't own a blank CD-R?If you're going to run a virtual machine make sure that it will have access to your USB devices.
Honestly, I think the easiest thing of all would be to scrounge a dollar for a blank CD and download a LiveCD like Knoppix. You will be able to boot a Linux environment directly from the CD and you won't have to worry about tunneling access from a virtual machine to your actual hardware. Plus, the LiveCD makes a handy system recovery tool if something bad happens to your system. It contains some useful partitioning tools and such.
I can only quote this from the download page for e200tool: "Windows executable link removed since it hardly works for anyone. People have a hard time to get this to work on Windows. You need libusb installed, but that's where my skills ends. On Linux this seems to work a lot easier."
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