PC experiences frequent BSODs, which may be linked to the hypervisor.
PC experiences frequent BSODs, which may be linked to the hypervisor.
In the past three to four years you've received excellent guidance and have often dismissed much of it. Those around you likely possess greater experience than you have in this life. It would be wise to pay attention, absorb the advice, and truly implement it. Until then, you'll never uncover the underlying reason for your issue.
I agree with you. I received a lot of helpful advice that I followed, and only a few suggestions stood out. One was to reinstall Windows, and another was to purchase a new computer or expensive parts. How some people handle their personal data differs from how others do, and I wouldn’t want to lose everything on my C drive or waste money just to stop the BSODs. Reinstalling Windows or buying something costly isn’t guaranteed to solve my issue. I made this forum post so I could find other users here offering more advice and suggestions on preventing these BSODs.
why not purchase an inexpensive ssd and mount windows there instead of replacing the existing drive if you're not ready to reinstall on the current one.
I have an extra SSD available, but because setting it up and installing Windows might be quite complicated, I’m looking for alternative solutions.
I used to try it years back just to check if the latest update helped. I didn’t know you’d never cleaned the installation before. It’s a single solution for the BSOD that keeps coming up, even with new drivers.
Whatever applications and configurations are set up on my computer aren't the main issue. It will take a long time for me to reapply all my settings and reinstall the apps I use often. Fifteen minutes feels like a lot. I have the extra SATA SSD ready, but I need a SATA cable and a method to turn off my M.2 SSD that's already running Windows. I'm concerned it could cause problems when installing Windows on the SATA SSD.
consider removing the NVMe during installation onto an SSD. Windows will recognize it and prefer using its boot partition. It's better to avoid letting it do that.
you don't need everything installed, only enough to check for errors. It isn't intended to replace NVMe, just a test.
installing on an SSD in a modern PC usually takes around 15 minutes. This is significantly faster than before. Of course, getting it back home will still take some time.