Entry tags:
BSOD
Argh, I have a computer problem!
I started up my rickety laptop this morning, and it got to the black Windows screen with the little progress bar, and then flashed a blue screen at me and restarted. It has done this repeatedly now. I have started in Safe Mode with Networking, and am hence actually online and functional, but this is plainly not ideal. I have had devce driver issues in the past, so I suspect that is the problem, but I am going to need advice on dealing with it. As a first step, I am looking up how to change the System Failure = Auto-Restart option as it is preventing me actually reading the blue-screen message.
Geeks: What do I do after that?
I started up my rickety laptop this morning, and it got to the black Windows screen with the little progress bar, and then flashed a blue screen at me and restarted. It has done this repeatedly now. I have started in Safe Mode with Networking, and am hence actually online and functional, but this is plainly not ideal. I have had devce driver issues in the past, so I suspect that is the problem, but I am going to need advice on dealing with it. As a first step, I am looking up how to change the System Failure = Auto-Restart option as it is preventing me actually reading the blue-screen message.
Geeks: What do I do after that?
no subject
Seriously though, I can give you an account on the desktop to use (now
no subject
no subject
I'll need you to go turn the desktop on first though ;)
no subject
Thank you! *kiss*
no subject
no subject
I am not a geek, though.
no subject
Also: copy your important stuff off it to network or memory stick or whatever ASAP, if you haven't already done it. If you have an impending hardware doom situation, you want your data safe.
no subject
Oh yes you are!
no subject
OTOH you can get away with Safe Mode with Networking for quite a while if you don't need to do any printing etc ;-)
memtest
Somewhere on the desk in the front room should be a CD-R labelled "System Rescue CD". You could try booting your laptop from this CD, and when you get to the boot prompt, type "memtest" (I think, you can press F2 to read the options) to run a memory checker. That's a good first step in diagnosing a BSOD.