it erased my background and all that stuff but its ok. thanks for the help
you saved my sanity.
Sorry, that was probably the 024 line. It ususally gets removed because people don’t know how the heck it got there. Should have asked you about it.
Open HJT, click the misc tools button, click backups, checkmark the 024 line, click restore.
REBOOT
[b]O24 - Desktop Component 0: (no name) - http://www.paciolan.com/misc/usc2007fbschedule.jpg[/b]
WOO!
i feel like partying that nasty little thing is gone!
Well that’s good. 
You could check in control panel under sounds or similar to see if anything is turned off, or right click the sound icon on your task bar, open volume control and see if it’s muted.
Here’s a links that may help. Sorry not really my field.
http://www.computerhope.com/issues/ch000208.htm
so we’ll clean up
click start button, click run, copy and paste the following line into the box and click ok
combofix /u
Open HJT, click misc tools button, slide the slider down, click uninstall.
Run this clean up utility. When first run, it will be in demo mode to show you what it will remove. Review it, then run in real mode.
CleanUp
Create a new restore point
You must be logged on to an administrator account
Go to Start - All Programs - Accessories - System Tools - System Restore.
Click Create a restore point, and then click Next.
In the text box labeled Restore Point Description, type a name for this restore point , click create
Remove old restore points
Disk Cleanup
- Go to Start - All Programs - Accessories - system tools. Launch the Disk Cleanup tool and let it run. When it finishes a box with tabs will appear, select the more options tab. On this tab you will find a section for System Restore. If you press the Clean Up button for that section, Windows will delete all restore points except for the most recent one.
Keep SAS updated and run it from time to time. Remember the free version is on demand only. Use the cleanup utility you just downloaded from time to time.
It looks like you are using windows firewall. It doesn’t provide outbound protection. A third party firewall will.
A discussion on free firewalls can be found here.
http://forum.avast.com/index.php?topic=30808.0
Open an Internet Explorer (only) window and go to http://www.java.com/en/download/manual.jsp > In the middle of the page, click on the Download button to the right of Java Runtime Environment (JRE) 6u3 > If Information Bar pop-ups up, right-click on it and say it’s OK to display the blocked content.
You do not have to install the Java Web Start ActiveX Control
Accept the license agreement > Click on Windows (XP,Vista, .etc) Offline Installation, Multi-language and Save the file jre-6u3-windows-i586-p.exe to your desktop; do not Run it.
When the download is complete, close all browser windows and double-click on the saved file to install the update.
Delete the downloaded installation file after completing the above procedure and reboot if not prompted to do so.
Open Control Panel > Add/Remove Programs:
Uninstall anything that says Sun Java, Java JRE, or similar except Java TM 6 Update 3 which you just installed.
Close Add/Remove Programs.
In Windows Explorer, navigate to C:\Program Files\Java <=this folder, if found. Delete any subfolders except the subfolder jre1.6.0_03 which was just created by the installation above.
Do NOT delete C:\Program Files\JavaVM <=this folder, if found!