F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Wow, another total mess!

Wow, another total mess!

Wow, another total mess!

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Nystul_
Junior Member
38
02-18-2016, 08:49 AM
#1
I believed I had fixed everything with my fourth update of Windows 10. Turns out, it wasn’t enough. I got another installation, this one caught off guard by a kernel trap. Once it happened, it restarted itself. When I opened Chrome, it showed an unexpected error, then the screen went dark and showed the ROG logo. I tried again, but the same thing occurred. There’s been a lot of crashes and blue screens, and each one seems different.
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Nystul_
02-18-2016, 08:49 AM #1

I believed I had fixed everything with my fourth update of Windows 10. Turns out, it wasn’t enough. I got another installation, this one caught off guard by a kernel trap. Once it happened, it restarted itself. When I opened Chrome, it showed an unexpected error, then the screen went dark and showed the ROG logo. I tried again, but the same thing occurred. There’s been a lot of crashes and blue screens, and each one seems different.

H
huyt37
Junior Member
1
02-18-2016, 10:09 AM
#2
They display a blue screen with an error message or a sad face, indicating a problem. Or your computer is simply closing down unexpectedly.
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huyt37
02-18-2016, 10:09 AM #2

They display a blue screen with an error message or a sad face, indicating a problem. Or your computer is simply closing down unexpectedly.

P
168
02-21-2016, 03:02 AM
#3
Have you checked both wired and wireless options? The MB network controller might be problematic. You've already dealt with RAM issues—consider trying DP15.6 (driverpack solution) to see which drivers are suggested.
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Pixelplayer145
02-21-2016, 03:02 AM #3

Have you checked both wired and wireless options? The MB network controller might be problematic. You've already dealt with RAM issues—consider trying DP15.6 (driverpack solution) to see which drivers are suggested.

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Spaceface16518
Senior Member
564
03-08-2016, 02:42 AM
#4
I've experienced BSODs, freezes (connected to the motherboard's faulty RAM slots on the left) and occasional resets (black screen followed by a post-screen).
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Spaceface16518
03-08-2016, 02:42 AM #4

I've experienced BSODs, freezes (connected to the motherboard's faulty RAM slots on the left) and occasional resets (black screen followed by a post-screen).

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Xo_PVP_Girl_oX
Senior Member
500
03-08-2016, 03:23 AM
#5
The latest wireless card I own offers 11mb/s speed and supports Windows XP. I plan to test a driver pack if it helps the device run more smoothly...
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Xo_PVP_Girl_oX
03-08-2016, 03:23 AM #5

The latest wireless card I own offers 11mb/s speed and supports Windows XP. I plan to test a driver pack if it helps the device run more smoothly...

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Noobso
Member
52
03-09-2016, 12:34 AM
#6
Ensure your Asus motherboard has the "MemOK!" button beside the RAM slots.
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Noobso
03-09-2016, 12:34 AM #6

Ensure your Asus motherboard has the "MemOK!" button beside the RAM slots.

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Lucadagreat
Member
236
03-13-2016, 04:33 PM
#7
You should press it at specific moments depending on your system settings—like during startup, power-on, or certain menu options. Check the manual for exact instructions.
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Lucadagreat
03-13-2016, 04:33 PM #7

You should press it at specific moments depending on your system settings—like during startup, power-on, or certain menu options. Check the manual for exact instructions.

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sniper5403
Junior Member
15
03-30-2016, 03:46 PM
#8
Attempt this upon startup. The reason I recommended this approach is that I frequently experienced frequent crashes when launching Battlefield 4, which later turned out to be due to insufficient RAM. Initially, I experimented by rearranging RAM modules into various slots and testing different RAM sticks. Eventually, I pressed the MemOk! button during bootup, which adjusted certain RAM settings and eliminated the crashes.
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sniper5403
03-30-2016, 03:46 PM #8

Attempt this upon startup. The reason I recommended this approach is that I frequently experienced frequent crashes when launching Battlefield 4, which later turned out to be due to insufficient RAM. Initially, I experimented by rearranging RAM modules into various slots and testing different RAM sticks. Eventually, I pressed the MemOk! button during bootup, which adjusted certain RAM settings and eliminated the crashes.

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Dephunkpunk_2
Senior Member
484
04-03-2016, 12:38 AM
#9
It's unusual that each BSOD displays a unique issue. Just keep an eye on it until you see "ERROR_MICROSOFT_CANT_MAKE_A_STABLE_OS".
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Dephunkpunk_2
04-03-2016, 12:38 AM #9

It's unusual that each BSOD displays a unique issue. Just keep an eye on it until you see "ERROR_MICROSOFT_CANT_MAKE_A_STABLE_OS".

O
ostenvelez
Member
241
04-03-2016, 06:41 AM
#10
I'll give it another shot with the memok method.
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ostenvelez
04-03-2016, 06:41 AM #10

I'll give it another shot with the memok method.

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