You possibly can't rule out malware. Maybe you should look at her internet history and see if some dodgy sites have been accessed that could have deposited a corrupting trojan.
I would download some antimalware software from Malwarebytes and scan the system. What Anti-Virus protection is on this laptop? And is it fully up to date?
One has to ask what would give RUNDLL32 a hard time. A corrupted DLL file? Trojan?
Suspishio
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When you try to enable Sound, Rundll32.exe uses a DLL program in Windows\system32 (I don't know which one); if there is a problem with this DLL the an execution error can occur. It could have been corrupted at last shut down or something.
You could try and switch off (temporarily) DEP (Data Execution Protection) and see if that cures the sound enabling problem:
- Right click Computer, select properties
- Select Advanced System Settings (in the left pane)
- Advanced tab (you should already be there)
- Click Settings in the Performance section
- Select the Data Execution Prevention tab
- Select "Turn on DEP for all programs and services except..."
- Click Add and browse to \Windows\System32\Rundll32.exe
- You could consider adding \Windows\explorer.exe
If this doesn't help, you could try repairing Vista (I think that's F8 when booting and using the repair console.
Suspishio
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If it had Realtek HD Sound Manager, try reinstalling it. If you did not, try installing it.
This not the first time I've seen you throw this "tit-bit" out there, and again will pull you up on it. Don't you think you should find out if it actually a RealTek card before advising to install drivers/managerfor a RealTek card??
First thing to try (as corrupted DLL file was a very possible assessment) would simply be to use System Restore to roll Windows back to just before that eventful shut-down. The other is to use Windows repair option, using your copy of Windows or the supplied recovery disk.
Either option should get your daughter's notebook back on track.
kaninelupus
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