Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
hm, as long as you have all the windows updates it should always correctly identify your cpu. can't expect much from sp0 of course.
The CD was SP2 and I did Windows Updates until all recommended updates were installed, early on.
One of the main reasons for my concern is that I had a sort of system melt down in early March, and that CPU was in there. After a hair raising week, I determined that the mobo had gone haywire. I had no video, and I replaced the video card and got no response from the on button. Putting in a different PSU, the new PSU went up in smoke in literally less than a second, giving off a strong smell of burnt electronics. The second video card turns out to have been killed too. At that point I knew my mobo was the culprit. Everything else in the system AFAIK survived the assault, but there's no certainty of that. So, that message in Device Manager has me wondering if anything happened to the CPU. However, the messages I'm getting would seem to indicate a configuration/driver issue, not a hardware problem, but who knows?
Right now I have the CD in a typical CD sleeve and under some of the heaviest books you'll find. An 8 pounder beneath, 10 + 10 + 4 pounders = ~24 lb on top. I'll leave it there a while, maybe a week and see if it will read. If not, my thought is to clamp it between two pieces of wood and put it in the oven, hopefully controlled somehow at around 105-110 degrees F for an hour or two and allow a slow cooldown. I have a feeling that this would accomplish the flattening required, but temperature control of my oven may be a little tricky.
Come to think of it I do have a thermostat I bought some years ago and have never used. It's designed to turn on and off an electric circuit and I believe it's adjustable. I could hook it up to a hotplate and put it in a chamber. It was designed (I believe) to incubate chicken eggs for hatching. I was planning on using it for one of my somewhat out there kitchen projects (i.e. home tempeh production, which I used to be pretty good at, BTW).

I guess I could experiment with that. I have the digital temperature sensors to monitor it... nothing too sophisticated but I have calibrated them pretty carefully.