The computer becomes unresponsive during the Windows installation process using a USB drive.
The computer becomes unresponsive during the Windows installation process using a USB drive.
We’ve checked various steps to identify the issue. The PC freezes during the installation process, and providing detailed information will help us assist you more effectively. To begin, make sure the bootable USB is set as the boot device.
I believe I was compromised in my CS:GO game, experiencing inconsistent performance ranging from 15% to 40%. Occasionally I see a blue screen with irql, unhandled code mode, and incorrect configuration details. I've reset the PC, tried unplugging and replating RAM, checked thermal paste, and runmed multiple commands for hours.
Is this your first setup? Or are you replacing something? Either way, switching to another USB port and using a different machine can help. You could move the drive you want to install Windows on and transfer it to another device, then reinstall. Having a backup computer or a friend with one will make the process easier.
I'm trying to reinstall Windows 11 but hypervisor is showing BSOD and I can't proceed past the setup. The custom installation from last year was functioning well until today.
Consider alternative setups if the default configuration doesn't work. Reset CMOS and test again. Also, use a different drive and port for installation.
I set up the media tools on my laptop, should I change the NVMe ports? I only have a 1TB NVMe drive, and the BIOS scan showed no issues. I believe it might be malware that lingers after a factory reset. I updated the BIOS, and it worked without freezing, but I’m still encountering kmode blue screen codes.
Now can operate in Safe Mode on Windows 11 without issues, but it crashes when booting normally. Could be a software problem. I tried putting the system in Safe Mode to download files, and it worked for a short time before crashing. If I boot normally, I might be able to run it for about five minutes before it stops working. Any suggestions?
You can now start up properly after disabling another driver with unclear names. There are safe tools available for a clean driver reset or installation.
If you actually got hit with a real root kit, I'd *highly* recommend shredding all parts with data storage (mobo and drives) and replacing them. There is no gain in trying to salvage these things especially when compared to the risk of a persistent threat living on your system