I added a second monitor(Acer G215H) to my desk alongside my HP 2311x monitor two weeks ago. The HP monitor is the primary monitor. Recently, I have been encountering frequent Blue Screens and I do not know why. The only thing I remember is that the Blue Screens are for different reasons each time it occurs.
I know the Stop Codes are important, but how do I view them?
Also, are the Dump files any useful to solving this? How do I read them?
try running memtest, it may be bad memory addresses (happened to me)
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http://pcpartpicker.com/p/2kUq0
the average script-follower/lack of common sense: http://www.techtales.com/tftechs.php?m=200504#8418
windoge 8 has the saddest excuse for a BSOD, it just tells you the type of error, no stop code, no nothing, just "something went wrong, all your unsaved work has now been lost to the void that is volatile memory"
try running memtest, it may be bad memory addresses (happened to me)
That's a real shot in the dark. If I were to have someone test against all the different reasons I've received a stop error, they would have no time to play Minecraft.
That's a real shot in the dark. If I were to have someone test against all the different reasons I've received a stop error, they would have no time to play Minecraft.
I would rather fix a serious problem than play a game, dude.
I would rather fix a serious problem than play a game, dude.
So would I, and I seem to have encountered a bug in the forums, this is my first time on my machine today, and it says I already ran out of upvotes (if I had to guess, it's actually a 24 hour period not aligned to the day-night cycle)
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
http://pcpartpicker.com/p/2kUq0
the average script-follower/lack of common sense: http://www.techtales.com/tftechs.php?m=200504#8418
windoge 8 has the saddest excuse for a BSOD, it just tells you the type of error, no stop code, no nothing, just "something went wrong, all your unsaved work has now been lost to the void that is volatile memory"
If you can get to the advance start up menu, you can disable automatic restart on system failure which will allow you to write down the STOP error codes, from there you should be able to Google them on a working computer.
I added a second monitor(Acer G215H) to my desk alongside my HP 2311x monitor two weeks ago. The HP monitor is the primary monitor. Recently, I have been encountering frequent Blue Screens and I do not know why. The only thing I remember is that the Blue Screens are for different reasons each time it occurs.
I know the Stop Codes are important, but how do I view them?
Also, are the Dump files any useful to solving this? How do I read them?
Sorry for the lack information.
Sure dump files are useful. Can you upload any of them?
http://pcpartpicker.com/p/2kUq0
the average script-follower/lack of common sense: http://www.techtales.com/tftechs.php?m=200504#8418
windoge 8 has the saddest excuse for a BSOD, it just tells you the type of error, no stop code, no nothing, just "something went wrong, all your unsaved work has now been lost to the void that is volatile memory"
That's a real shot in the dark. If I were to have someone test against all the different reasons I've received a stop error, they would have no time to play Minecraft.
http://pcpartpicker.com/p/2kUq0
the average script-follower/lack of common sense: http://www.techtales.com/tftechs.php?m=200504#8418
windoge 8 has the saddest excuse for a BSOD, it just tells you the type of error, no stop code, no nothing, just "something went wrong, all your unsaved work has now been lost to the void that is volatile memory"
It was an example. In order to fix the problem you must find what caused it, not start trying things and hope you fix it along the way.
I agree, that's why I requested them earlier.
Pointless to run unless you are sure it may be a memory issue.