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- Snooper(TM), the System Checker
- Copyright 1994-1995 John Vias
-
-
- FREQUENTLY-ASKED QUESTIONS (AND ANSWERS) ABOUT SNOOPER
-
- Table of Contents
-
- Acquisition and Version Questions
- How do I know if I have the latest version?
- Where can I get the latest version?
- Pricing and Payment Questions
- How much does Snooper cost?
- What credit cards do you accept?
- Technical Support Questions
- Snooper goes bonkers under Microsoft Windows. Why?
- Snooper locks my machine at the Main screen. What do I do?
- Snooper locks my machine in the Diagnostics screen. What do I do?
- I get erroneous results from Snooper. What's wrong?
-
-
- Acquisition and Version Questions
-
- How do I know if I have the latest version?
- If the version you have is over six months old, there probably is
- a newer version out. To know for sure, check the locations
- mentioned in answer to the following question.
-
- Where can I get the latest version?
- See the first page of SNOOPER.DOC or Snooper's Ordering
- Information help screen (in Snooper, press <F1>, then <O>) for
- places to get Snooper. It is always available on CompuServe, in
- the PC Hardware Forum (GO PCHW), General Hardware Library (4),
- under the filename SNOOPR.ZIP (note there's no "E" in the
- filename).
-
-
- Pricing and Payment Questions
-
- How much does Snooper cost?
- Currently, Snooper costs $39 for a single user license. If you
- plan to use Snooper to gather information across a network, or to
- send out Snooper disks to clients or branch offices to gather
- system info, or in any other way that might allow more than one
- person to run it at the same time, you must purchase a site
- license or corporate license. Pricing for multi-user licenses is
- individualized for your situation, and surprisingly affordable.
- Call us at the phone number listed both on the first page of
- Snooper's manual and on Snooper's Ordering Information help screen
- (in Snooper, press <F1>, then <O>).
-
- What credit cards do you accept?
- Currently, we accept Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American
- Express. Of course, we accept checks by mail, as well.
-
-
- Technical Support Questions
-
- Snooper goes bonkers under Microsoft Windows. Why?
- Snooper was not designed to run under Windows. Yes, we do supply
- PIF and icon files for it, and many users can run at least the
- Main screen but other screens may cause lockups or erroneous
- results. The Benchmark screen, for example, wasn't designed to
- work in a multitasking environment. And the Diagnostics screen
- may cause a lockup when it checks serial port IRQs. If you need
- this information, simply exit Windows completely and run Snooper
- from the DOS prompt.
-
- Snooper locks my machine at the Main screen. What do I do?
- Sometimes, in Snooper's message box in the lower-right corner of
- the screen, there will be a message such as "Use /t" or something
- similar. This is a command line switch Snooper suggests you use
- to avoid the lockup. If you see such a message, make a note of
- the switch it mentions, reboot your machine and re-run Snooper
- with the command line switch indicated. In the above example, you
- would type "snooper /t" at the DOS prompt (without the quotes, of
- course). This will often solve the problem. If you follow this
- procedure and Snooper then mentions a different switch, re-run it
- with both switches specified.
- If there is no message in the message box, you'll have to do some
- experimentation. Read the section of Snooper's manual that
- discusses command line syntax and try all the switches together
- that disable certain detection routines (e.g., /c /n /t /i). If
- Snooper runs, eliminate one switch at a time until you find the
- one (or two?) you need.
- If the above techniques don't work, try bypassing your CONFIG.SYS
- and AUTOEXEC.BAT files. With DOS 6.x, you can press a function
- key to do so. (Enter "VER" at the DOS prompt to check your DOS
- version.) With earlier DOS versions, load each file into a text
- editor (e.g., the DOS EDIT program) and type "REM " (there's a
- space after the REM) in front of every line. Then save the file
- and reboot. This will cause DOS to ignore those lines,
- effectively bypassing the file. If the above technique works,
- remove the "REM " from one line at a time until you find the
- program that's interfering with Snooper. If everything seems to
- work OK for the next few weeks, you can probably do without that
- program anyway.
- And if none of the above works, it may just be that your system is
- not compatible with Snooper. Sometimes a ROM BIOS or DOS version
- will have a subtle bug, or the timing on the motherboard wasn't
- perfect, or something in your system just wasn't designed to fully
- implement an industry standard.
-
- Snooper locks my machine in the Diagnostics screen. What do I do?
- Chances are, if you specify the "/O" command line switch when you
- invoke Snooper, it will work OK.
-
- I get erroneous results from Snooper. What's wrong?
- There are lots of things that can interfere with Snooper's ability
- to gather accurate information. As we mentioned above, BIOS and
- DOS bugs, motherboards not being designed quite right--and a host
- of other possible problems. Also, some hardware tries to look
- like other hardware. Most mice, for example, try their darndest
- to look like Microsoft mice. So if you have a different brand of
- mouse, and Snooper reports that you have a Microsoft mouse, well,
- it was simply fooled. You can try following the procedures above
- (under "Snooper locks my machine"). If you still have specific
- questions about why Snooper is reporting what it is, you can call
- us on our query line and ask (for the phone number, again, see the
- first page of SNOOPER.DOC or Snooper's Ordering Information help
- screen--press <F1>, then <O>). All this having been said, it is
- still gratifying to hear many customers tell us Snooper is the
- most accurate system information program they've seen.
-
- Thank you for trying Snooper.
- We look forward to hearing from you soon.