After you press CTRL+ALT+DEL to shut down and restart the computer, Windows 95 might be unable to find the CD-ROM or stall when trying to access the drive; sometimes, pressing CTRL+ALT+DEL will not reset the computer. This might occur if Windows 95 is relying on real-mode drivers for the Sound Blaster® or Media Vision™ Pro Audio proprietary CD-ROM drive. If this is the case, you cannot access anything on the CD-ROM because its drivers cannot load. If this happens, turn off and then restart the computer. Use the Add New Hardware option in Control Panel to install the protected-mode drivers provided with Windows 95 for the specific CD-ROM device.
This problem sometimes occurs with both protected-mode and real-mode (MSCDEX) drivers. To fix it, turn off AutoPlay, which is enabled by default, and then turn it back on again.
If Windows 95 cannot recognize the sound card, you might not be able to play .WAV files.
If a sound card has multiple CD-ROM adapters, they often include a program that activates the port to be used. This program must run before Windows 95 runs. If it doesn't, Windows 95 won't detect the port.
If you were using the Microsoft Mouse Manager with Windows 3.1, Windows 95 Setup automatically updates the POINTER.EXE and POINTER.DLL files in the Mouse directory. If these files are not updated correctly, the mouse might stall and report GROWSTUB as a running task in the Close Program dialog box. To fix this problem, remove all references to the mouse in the AUTOEXEC.BAT and CONFIG.SYS files, and make sure the correct POINTER files were copied to the Mouse directory and not just the Windows directory.
Windows 95 Setup installs APM support automatically if it was installed on the computer previously. You can enable APM support after Setup by using Device Manager.
If no APM drivers were installed under previous versions of Windows, no check mark appears. Checking this box enables the drivers.
This option forces Windows 95 to use an APM 1.1 BIOS in APM 1.0 mode. In some cases, a BIOS incorrectly handles the new functions provided by APM 1.1 but functions properly when used in 1.0 mode. On some computers, this is checked automatically during Setup.
In some cases, a BIOS incorrectly handles an unsupported call to the APM interfaces of some SL-type chipsets, causing the computer to stop responding. Disabling this option prevents the system from not responding.
Windows 95 calls the APM interface for this purpose with greater frequency than earlier versions of Windows 3.x, causing some computers to shut down. Disabling this feature prevents this, but also disables the battery meter.