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I'm running Windows Server 2003. When I log on to the server using Remote Desktop (from Windows XP) it plays an E minor triad - long E, G B G E - through the PC speaker.

We've tried setting Remote Desktop to leave remote sound at the remote computer and do not play remote sound but the sound still plays.

There are no alerts and nothing in the event log.

Why is my server being so musical? It clearly wants to tell us something... but what?

masegaloeh
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Brian Beckett
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    Is it a Volkswagen? – Kyle Smith Jun 16 '11 at 16:17
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    More serious comment: It might help to know the model and make of the server. Does it have a DAS? This could be an error code on the DRAC/BMC/SAS Card. – Kyle Smith Jun 16 '11 at 16:18
  • +1 for knowing the note sequence, heh. Does it do the same when connecting from all client machines? – Shane Madden Jun 16 '11 at 16:20
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    Because it doesn't know the words? – joeqwerty Jun 16 '11 at 16:55
  • @Kyle Smith - Gonna own up here, I don't know what any of those acronyms mean. I was hoping that somebody would recognise the note sequence and know exactly what it was :) – Brian Beckett Jun 16 '11 at 17:01
  • You think that's bad? Listen to the arpeggios that my server plays every 5 minutes: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aS_IYe5JTZ4 – MDMarra Jun 16 '11 at 17:40
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    @Cosmic google is your friend if you don't know those acronyms. They're fairly common. – MDMarra Jun 16 '11 at 17:44
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    @Cosmic - They're just various systems management cards. DRAC = Dell Remote Access Console, BMC = Baseband Management Controller. SAS is a type of hard disk. Acronymfinder is a good tool as well. – Kyle Smith Jun 16 '11 at 18:24
  • @Kyle, MarkM - sorry, you're absolutely right and I've upvoted both of your comments. – Brian Beckett Jun 16 '11 at 19:15
  • @Cosmic Flame - at a guess, your server is using a "consumer" grade motherboard, and is having a hardware issue, probably related to cooling, as per Matt's suggestion. Back when I used to do antivirus stuff for MS we used to get no end of people reporting this as a virus issue, and it always turned out to be a cooling/hardware issue... – Rob Moir Jun 17 '11 at 07:29
  • M. Smith might be thinking of [the person who discovered that the beeps were on the remote, not local, machine, and were the system warning that the fan speed was low](http://social.technet.microsoft.com/forums/en-gb/itproxpsp/thread/D91D54D0-59EA-491D-A1B5-F933D78DC377). – JdeBP Jun 17 '11 at 08:37

3 Answers3

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Have you considered that someone might be playing a prank on you?
Back when I was working in an environment with lots of Sun workstations a co-worker of mine would follow people on the security cameras and make the machines scream or laugh as you walked past.

Assuming you can rule out pranks, as others have suggested perhaps it's a RAID card or remote-access card trying to tell you something. I assume the event log you've looked at is the Windows event log - have you checked the IPMI event log (methods to do this vary by server manufacturer)?

voretaq7
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Have you seen http://support.microsoft.com/kb/261186?

I know nothing about music, so I don't know if either "Fur Elise" or "Its a small, small world" are an "E minor arpeggio", but even if not perhaps it's a different motherboard/bios manufacturer warning about something.

matt
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As it's coming from the PC speaker, rather than the sound card, I think you need to stop looking at the server side altogether because the server can't make sound come from the PC speaker.

I suggest either reinstalling or upgrading the remote desktop client or simply replace the client files with those from another PC that knows how to shut up. It's possible that there is some corruption in there somewhere which is causing the sound to be played.

John Gardeniers
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  • "the server can't make sound come from the PC speaker", how do you come to this assumption? – Tamara Wijsman Jun 17 '11 at 00:56
  • @TomWij, the server can send commands to the PC to play sound and if the client is appropriately configured that sound will play. However, the server cannot send a command to tell the client to play that sound on the speaker, so the PC will use the default Windows sound device, which is normally through the sound card. – John Gardeniers Jun 17 '11 at 01:05
  • Have you considered that it would play on the server's PC speaker? :) – Tamara Wijsman Jun 17 '11 at 10:10
  • @TomWij, not if the problem is on the PC, as I believe it is. – John Gardeniers Jun 17 '11 at 11:31