Help! Windows crashing and then not!
Help! Windows crashing and then not!
Windows 11 crash assistance...
Alienware M15R7 Laptop
Intel i7 12700H CPU
3070 Ti GPU
32 GB RAM
1 TB SSD.
My system has been crashing repeatedly since yesterday night (Blue Screen). It occurred every ten minutes. I've tried all possible fixes—full update, rolling back updates, checking the disk, disabling real-time antivirus protection, etc. I couldn't access system restore because I never created a backup point. I wasn't even aware this option existed.
I was forced to consider a clean install and decided to proceed. I was backing up essential files, including all picture files used for my desktop background. The pictures were stored on the hard drive, which remained connected. I checked the network adapter driver in Device Manager, wondering if it might be related since Windows wouldn't install it properly. This issue appeared on both screens (dual monitors).
Now the problem is resolved. I'm unsure what caused it—could it be the wallpaper or the dual-monitor setup with extended view? Perhaps switching my laptop screen to the main monitor would help. Please clarify and advise on preventing future occurrences.
Welcome to the forums, newcomer!
It might be a faulty driver or an OS corruption issue. The HDD could also be showing signs of wear.
Just a note: install the OS in offline mode, then manually add all drivers via the elevated command—right-click the installer and select Run as Administrator. After installing all drivers, connect to the website and run the OS update.
Have you recreated your bootable USB installer for your OS?
If removing the background resolved the issue, it's possible the laptop had a problem extending this image across two monitors. Did you already have the background in place when the issue began or did it appear immediately after applying it? Were you downloading the image from one of those (sometimes risky) background sites? Did the image size better match your monitor’s resolution?
Also, have you recently updated the Nvidia driver? The newest versions often introduce more issues than they fix, and this could be similar to the problems you're experiencing.
You might consider using a different generic background image (such as one available in Windows), and if it continues to cause crashes, try installing the GeForce Game Ready driver 566.36—the latest stable Nvidia driver.