System errors occur each time I turn off the device.
System errors occur each time I turn off the device.
I've been using my PC for about a year now, and so far I haven't encountered any viruses or hardware problems. I can spend hours on end watching videos, playing games, and doing whatever I want. Sometimes, when I leave the PC idle and come back later, it reports that Windows has recovered from a crash. When I open the details, it shows a Blue Screen. Why does it keep showing up as a Blue Screen but then recover? I've never actually seen a Blue Screen before, and it doesn't happen when I'm actively using the system.
This reminds me of those old TVs with two antennas. Place it close by and it functions properly, but when you move away, the image becomes blurry.
If the ntoskrnl.exe BSOD keeps appearing and your system won't start properly, Professional Windows Boot Software can be extremely useful. Windows Boot Genius is a solid choice.
1. Set up Windows Boot Genius on a functional machine. Place a blank CD/DVD/USB flash drive in the device you want to use. Click Burn to generate a bootable disk.
2. Load the newly created bootable disk into your computer during a blue screen of death, and configure BIOS to boot from the USB drive.
3. Once the Windows Boot Genius interface appears, navigate to "Windows Rescue" and select Windows Backup to preserve your data in Windows 8.
4. From the available options—crash before loading bar, crash on loading bar, or crash after loading bar—pick the one that best fits your needs. Use the guidance on the right side of the interface to fix the ntoskrnl.exe BSOD issue.
Open the event viewer to identify the source of the blue screens.
Your device enters a low-power state to conserve energy while keeping essential functions active.