I should probably start off by listing my machines specs:
ECS A780GM-M3 AM2+/AM3 AMD 780G Micro ATX AMD Motherboard
AMD Athlon II X3 3.1GHz
SAPPHIRE 100253HDMI Radeon HD 4650 512MB (as a low-profile card) (outputting all graphics through a Vizio VX37L... not exactly top of the line, but it's the best I've got for the time being)
nMEDIAPC Black Aluminum / Acrylic / Steel HTPC 1080P (HTPC case)
OCZ Onyx OCZSSD2-1ONX32G (boot/OS drive... SSD drive... fast as all-get-out)
a couple ancient 8gig IDE drives for a little storage... all the MP3's and stuff is on other 'puters on the network
4gigs Corsair XMS2 1066 RAM
Windows 7 Professional x64
and what's giving me so much trouble... an nMEDIAPC PRO-LCD.
And, now... the problem!
When I first received the LCD and the Onyx, I slapped both in this machine (an Athlon II x2 with 2gigs 667 RAM) and installed Win7 on the Onyx and the LCD on a phonebook in its anti-static bag (it was a temporary thing). It worked great, even the sound visualization function. So, once I got all the rest of it, I slapped it together and tested it using this monitor and keyboard and mouse and it still worked great. Then for some reason I had to reinstall and that's where the problem started. From then on, it seems no matter what I try, everything except the PC Sound function works. I reinstalled yesterday and even tried installing the driver and software that came with it without the display plugged in and the driver installation installed as an admin and still nothing, except now I get a pulsating input from somewhere (seems to be the rear mic, even though there's nothing plugged in on it... if I disable the rear mic, the pulsing input signal to the display's sound interpretation thingy vanishes and I'm left with no sound viz).
Other than that one problem (which is the same in WMP and PC Sound... don't have Winamp installed on the HTPC, so I can't try that one). From the sound of the phantom audio signal, it sounds similar to the 60Hz signal that got fed back through a mixing board when I was trying to record the mixers output on my Sony camcorder (was filming a concert and wanted to use the audio from the board, but the camcorder's powered mic input ended up sending a 60Hz "signal" to the board, and probably would have sent it to the speakers if the mixer hadn't muted the output).
Does the sound viz have some oddball requirement of having the front audio ports plugged in (had problems with it before, so I unplugged it and now that the fifth case fan is partially blocking it, it's a pain to get it plugged in... with only two or even three case fans, the GPU runs at 90C and processor at about 75C... poor airflow through the case I think)?
Unfortunately, I didn't write down exactly what I did to get it to work before when I had the LCD and Onyx running on this machine, so I can't simply duplicate it on the media center step-for-step.
I'm wondering if the software could be the culprit... maybe it has something against the way that board handles the audio (before, the audio was running to a pair of JBL computer speakers through the onboard rear ports of an ASUS M2A-VM... now that it's in the nMedia case and sitting pretty in the entertainment center, it's outputting the audio through HDMI to the TV, where the TV routes the audio to its speakers and also the stereo when it's on)... could outputting the audio through the video card's HDMI-out prevent it from getting to the LCD's software's PC Sound graphic thing?
Is there a better software that would do everything this LCD's software can (custom graphics, sound viz, Windows Media Center, Windows Media Player, etc. etc.) but do it better? How about adding RSS feeds into everything in the parentheses? What is there besides what came with it and LCDSmartie and LCDWriter for software for these types of displays? Anything worthwhile?
Could it be something to do with the display itself?
I'm a computer nerd but I'm completely new to these computer-mounted LCD displays (unless you count owning two laptops as computer-mounted LCDs...

Any help would be appreciated!
Or any pointers in the right direction would be great.
Thanks,
Aaron B.
Oh... almost forgot... if you want, I can get video of it doing its pulsing thing (and the audio from it) and post it someplace and post a link to it here. Let me know if that would be worth recording and I'll post it someplace.