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Thread Tools | Display Modes |
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Safe Mode Display
I am using Win2KProSp4 and a GeForce AGP 7600GT vid card and when I go into
Safe Mode, the display is tattered, torn up and I cannot really read the letters on the Icons. When I move the mouse pointer, it cause tearing etc. I did not have this problem before I installed this card. I have reinstalled the vid drivers (very difficult because the tearing etc in Normal mode is the same after I uninstall the vid drivers and reboot) with the latest from Nvidea and also Omegaman's drivers. I uninstalled the previous drivers, rebooted and than installed the drivers again. My old vid card was an ATI Radeon 8500 AGP and it did not cause the above tearing etc when the drivers were removed. It seemed to have a basic VGA driver that took over then. I guess my question is that I wonder if there should be a default VGA driver that would let that card work after I uninstall the videp drivers. Thanks, Buffalo |
#2
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Safe Mode Display
Buffalo wrote:
I am using Win2KProSp4 and a GeForce AGP 7600GT vid card and when I go into Safe Mode, the display is tattered, torn up and I cannot really read the letters on the Icons. When I move the mouse pointer, it cause tearing etc. I did not have this problem before I installed this card. I have reinstalled the vid drivers (very difficult because the tearing etc in Normal mode is the same after I uninstall the vid drivers and reboot) with the latest from Nvidea and also Omegaman's drivers. I uninstalled the previous drivers, rebooted and than installed the drivers again. My old vid card was an ATI Radeon 8500 AGP and it did not cause the above tearing etc when the drivers were removed. It seemed to have a basic VGA driver that took over then. I guess my question is that I wonder if there should be a default VGA driver that would let that card work after I uninstall the videp drivers. Thanks, Buffalo I used to have the same symptoms a few years ago only I was using a Nvidia Geforce2 MX AGP. The problem would occur from time to time when I booted up my pc, and the tearing was present in Safe and Normal modes. Even trying to reload the AGP drivers didn't fix it. The only way I could restore to a normal display was to re-install Windows 2k (sp4). My pc then worked ok for a while then the problem would eventually return when the pc was booted. In the end I managed to track down rhe cause, and it was down to the chipset drivers supplied by Dell for my Dell pc. My solution was not to install these but to let Windows 2k generic drivers take care of the chipset. I'vs had no repeat of the problem since. |
#3
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Safe Mode Display
Frank wrote: Buffalo wrote: I am using Win2KProSp4 and a GeForce AGP 7600GT vid card and when I go into Safe Mode, the display is tattered, torn up and I cannot really read the letters on the Icons. When I move the mouse pointer, it cause tearing etc. I did not have this problem before I installed this card. I have reinstalled the vid drivers (very difficult because the tearing etc in Normal mode is the same after I uninstall the vid drivers and reboot) with the latest from Nvidea and also Omegaman's drivers. I uninstalled the previous drivers, rebooted and than installed the drivers again. My old vid card was an ATI Radeon 8500 AGP and it did not cause the above tearing etc when the drivers were removed. It seemed to have a basic VGA driver that took over then. I guess my question is that I wonder if there should be a default VGA driver that would let that card work after I uninstall the video drivers. Thanks, Buffalo I used to have the same symptoms a few years ago only I was using a Nvidia Geforce2 MX AGP. The problem would occur from time to time when I booted up my pc, and the tearing was present in Safe and Normal modes. Even trying to reload the AGP drivers didn't fix it. The only way I could restore to a normal display was to re-install Windows 2k (sp4). My pc then worked ok for a while then the problem would eventually return when the pc was booted. In the end I managed to track down rhe cause, and it was down to the chipset drivers supplied by Dell for my Dell pc. My solution was not to install these but to let Windows 2k generic drivers take care of the chipset. I'vs had no repeat of the problem since. Interesting. I just reinstalled my agp drivers from ECS with no difference. (EliteGroup mb K7s5a ver 3.1) What specific mb drivers did Win2K install? Interesting that a reinstall of Win2kSP4 fixed it for awhile. Was that a fresh (clean) install, or just an install over the top? I may just reinstall all my MB drivers. I can't seem to find the Standard PCI VGA Display Drivers.inf file on my computer. When I uninstall my vid drivers and reboot, the display is so corrupted with incomplete objects and tearing, when I moved the mouse pointer, that I had a hard time installing the vid drivers again. I finally got it down to a point where I knew what to do and what to click on to complete the install, even though I couldn't read what was happening. The biggest problem was that the install would stop because there was a screen behind the install screen that stated the drivers were not certified and asked if I wanted to install them anyways. Since I couldn't see it, I couldn't get the drivers installed. Later, I knew it was there and worked around it. Thanks for you input. Buffalo |
#4
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Safe Mode Display
Buffalo wrote:
Frank wrote: Buffalo wrote: I am using Win2KProSp4 and a GeForce AGP 7600GT vid card and when I go into Safe Mode, the display is tattered, torn up and I cannot really read the letters on the Icons. When I move the mouse pointer, it cause tearing etc. I did not have this problem before I installed this card. I have reinstalled the vid drivers (very difficult because the tearing etc in Normal mode is the same after I uninstall the vid drivers and reboot) with the latest from Nvidea and also Omegaman's drivers. I uninstalled the previous drivers, rebooted and than installed the drivers again. My old vid card was an ATI Radeon 8500 AGP and it did not cause the above tearing etc when the drivers were removed. It seemed to have a basic VGA driver that took over then. I guess my question is that I wonder if there should be a default VGA driver that would let that card work after I uninstall the video drivers. Thanks, Buffalo I used to have the same symptoms a few years ago only I was using a Nvidia Geforce2 MX AGP. The problem would occur from time to time when I booted up my pc, and the tearing was present in Safe and Normal modes. Even trying to reload the AGP drivers didn't fix it. The only way I could restore to a normal display was to re-install Windows 2k (sp4). My pc then worked ok for a while then the problem would eventually return when the pc was booted. In the end I managed to track down rhe cause, and it was down to the chipset drivers supplied by Dell for my Dell pc. My solution was not to install these but to let Windows 2k generic drivers take care of the chipset. I'vs had no repeat of the problem since. Interesting. I just reinstalled my agp drivers from ECS with no difference. (EliteGroup mb K7s5a ver 3.1) What specific mb drivers did Win2K install? Interesting that a reinstall of Win2kSP4 fixed it for awhile. Was that a fresh (clean) install, or just an install over the top? I may just reinstall all my MB drivers. I can't seem to find the Standard PCI VGA Display Drivers.inf file on my computer. When I uninstall my vid drivers and reboot, the display is so corrupted with incomplete objects and tearing, when I moved the mouse pointer, that I had a hard time installing the vid drivers again. I finally got it down to a point where I knew what to do and what to click on to complete the install, even though I couldn't read what was happening. The biggest problem was that the install would stop because there was a screen behind the install screen that stated the drivers were not certified and asked if I wanted to install them anyways. Since I couldn't see it, I couldn't get the drivers installed. Later, I knew it was there and worked around it. Thanks for you input. Buffalo As I understand it, each video card is supposed to support some standard output modes. When no custom video driver is available, the OS uses its own VESA video driver, to make the video card work as a frame buffer. (If that driver did not exist, you wouldn't have a video display during the stages of OS installation.) You'd suspect that driver was being used, when colors are stuck at 16 colors, and display resolution is 800x600 or 640x480 (i.e. a pretty low res). There are two parts to drivers. There is the video card driver for the card. But there is also the motherboard chipset AGP driver, which declares the protocols it's supposed to support. On one of my Intel boards, you could change the AGP slot, between PCI protocol, or full AGP protocol, just by changing the driver used from the chipset drivers. Some chipset AGP drivers, also include a control panel for AGP in the OS, where you can set a couple things. Again, this is manufacturer specific, and needs to be researched first. For Intel, the settings would be in the BIOS, rather than being a poorly written app for the OS later. Some chipsets have problems with their AGP performance. The video card manufacturers know this, and they have a "quirks" list in the video card driver, such that they won't use AGP speed settings known to cause problems. For example, if the AGP interface won't run properly at 4x, the driver may choose to run at 1x. The ATI driver in particular, has "SMARTGart", which overrides your BIOS AGP speed setting, and does it's own speed setting. This may cause the ATI card display to flash briefly during POST. Once the driver is happy with the speed it has determined (or the quirks have told it to use), it won't try a higher speed until you use the SMARTGart control panel. The first release of SMARTGart was a disaster (caused crashes), but after three or four attempts to get it right, it finally worked respectably. I'm not aware of NVidia doing the same thing. It's possible the AGP setting in the BIOS, is in control for NVidia. And then, you need to trace down the particulars for your motherboard chipset, to see if it had any issues. Towards the end of the AGP era, the last chipsets made finally had AGP electrical interfaces, that properly implemented signaling. In the middle of the AGP era, some chipset makers struggled to get their AGP slots to run fast enough. And the marginal operation is what annoyed a lot of users. If you use a board like the K7S5A, you'd want to Google around, to see if the chipset ever caused a problem or not. I don't see any mention of a problem here, but perhaps there's a better guide somewhere else. http://k7s5amotherboardforum.yuku.co...ewtopic/id/888 Paul |
#5
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Safe Mode Display
Buffalo wrote:
Interesting. I just reinstalled my agp drivers from ECS with no difference. (EliteGroup mb K7s5a ver 3.1) What specific mb drivers did Win2K install? Interesting that a reinstall of Win2kSP4 fixed it for awhile. Was that a fresh (clean) install, or just an install over the top? I may just reinstall all my MB drivers. I can't seem to find the Standard PCI VGA Display Drivers.inf file on my computer. When I uninstall my vid drivers and reboot, the display is so corrupted with incomplete objects and tearing, when I moved the mouse pointer, that I had a hard time installing the vid drivers again. I finally got it down to a point where I knew what to do and what to click on to complete the install, even though I couldn't read what was happening. The biggest problem was that the install would stop because there was a screen behind the install screen that stated the drivers were not certified and asked if I wanted to install them anyways. Since I couldn't see it, I couldn't get the drivers installed. Later, I knew it was there and worked around it. Thanks for you input. There's a whole load of chipset drivers for all machines up to 2003 that Win2k covers If you look at machine.inf file (under WINNT) they are listed in there. Eg I have an Intel chipset 850 in my machine. The actual reference to my chipset driver is listed in the registry under HKLM/SYSTEM/ComtrolSet002/Enum/PCI/VEN&8086_DEV....where one of the devices listed is described as an Intel(R) 82801BA/BAM SMBus Controller - 2443, which I know correctly identifies my Intel 850 chipset. So my mb is automatically covered by Win2k, but then my machine is 10 years old. You shouldn't have to worry about thr 'inf' file for VGA as its driver is supplied by bootvid.dll which automatically supplies the VGA You don't have to uninstall Nvidia drivers as only the dll file is loaded and not the Vvidia drivers. It's the same file for Win2k in 'Safe' or even 'VGA' mode on the F8 menu when you boot. The fact that even VGA is corrupted suggests a chipset problem or a problem card, but before cosidering the latter.... I suggest doing a fresh re-install (partition and format) using ECS drivers to start with. Make sure the correct chipset driver is the first one you you install after Win2k sps installs. Hopefully that will fix the problem. When you've installed all the basic drivers, ie sound, video, do a backup of your system state (NTBackup. That's saved me many a time when the odd problem comes along |
#6
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Safe Mode Display
Frank wrote: Buffalo wrote: Interesting. I just reinstalled my agp drivers from ECS with no difference. (EliteGroup mb K7s5a ver 3.1) What specific mb drivers did Win2K install? Interesting that a reinstall of Win2kSP4 fixed it for awhile. Was that a fresh (clean) install, or just an install over the top? I may just reinstall all my MB drivers. I can't seem to find the Standard PCI VGA Display Drivers.inf file on my computer. When I uninstall my vid drivers and reboot, the display is so corrupted with incomplete objects and tearing, when I moved the mouse pointer, that I had a hard time installing the vid drivers again. I finally got it down to a point where I knew what to do and what to click on to complete the install, even though I couldn't read what was happening. The biggest problem was that the install would stop because there was a screen behind the install screen that stated the drivers were not certified and asked if I wanted to install them anyways. Since I couldn't see it, I couldn't get the drivers installed. Later, I knew it was there and worked around it. Thanks for you input. There's a whole load of chipset drivers for all machines up to 2003 that Win2k covers If you look at machine.inf file (under WINNT) they are listed in there. Eg I have an Intel chipset 850 in my machine. The actual reference to my chipset driver is listed in the registry under HKLM/SYSTEM/ComtrolSet002/Enum/PCI/VEN&8086_DEV....where one of the devices listed is described as an Intel(R) 82801BA/BAM SMBus Controller - 2443, which I know correctly identifies my Intel 850 chipset. So my mb is automatically covered by Win2k, but then my machine is 10 years old. You shouldn't have to worry about thr 'inf' file for VGA as its driver is supplied by bootvid.dll which automatically supplies the VGA You don't have to uninstall Nvidia drivers as only the dll file is loaded and not the Vvidia drivers. It's the same file for Win2k in 'Safe' or even 'VGA' mode on the F8 menu when you boot. The fact that even VGA is corrupted suggests a chipset problem or a problem card, but before cosidering the latter.... I suggest doing a fresh re-install (partition and format) using ECS drivers to start with. Make sure the correct chipset driver is the first one you you install after Win2k sps installs. Hopefully that will fix the problem. When you've installed all the basic drivers, ie sound, video, do a backup of your system state (NTBackup. That's saved me many a time when the odd problem comes along My present system is a dual boot system, Win98SE-Win2k SP4. Thanks for that advice Frank, but I'm afraid formating and doing a fresh clean install of Win2kSP4 is way too much work with all the updates and reinstalling all of my programs. It may well fix the problem I'm having, but I will just put up with the minor inconvenience that I now have (as long as I don't need to install new vid drivers or go into Safe mode). I also have two of those cards (7600GT) and both have the same problem. Haven't tried older Nvidea drivers though. I also reinstalled the ECS AGP drivers and changed the refresh rate of my LCD monitor from 75Hz to 60Hz with no difference with the problem. I also just installed the Nvidea 94.24 drivers over the Omega drivers. Slight change in color, but the same problem. Probably a corrupt or missing file somewhere in my Win2k OS. Win 2k is very stable but I believe I will be building a new PC with Win7 before next winter. Any suggestions? I do like playing Q3 online and some of the older games like Half-Life, Doom3, Unreal Tournament, Halo, etc. Thanks, Buffalo |
#7
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Safe Mode Display
Buffalo wrote:
Frank wrote: Buffalo wrote: Interesting. I just reinstalled my agp drivers from ECS with no difference. (EliteGroup mb K7s5a ver 3.1) What specific mb drivers did Win2K install? Interesting that a reinstall of Win2kSP4 fixed it for awhile. Was that a fresh (clean) install, or just an install over the top? I may just reinstall all my MB drivers. I can't seem to find the Standard PCI VGA Display Drivers.inf file on my computer. When I uninstall my vid drivers and reboot, the display is so corrupted with incomplete objects and tearing, when I moved the mouse pointer, that I had a hard time installing the vid drivers again. I finally got it down to a point where I knew what to do and what to click on to complete the install, even though I couldn't read what was happening. The biggest problem was that the install would stop because there was a screen behind the install screen that stated the drivers were not certified and asked if I wanted to install them anyways. Since I couldn't see it, I couldn't get the drivers installed. Later, I knew it was there and worked around it. Thanks for you input. There's a whole load of chipset drivers for all machines up to 2003 that Win2k covers If you look at machine.inf file (under WINNT) they are listed in there. Eg I have an Intel chipset 850 in my machine. The actual reference to my chipset driver is listed in the registry under HKLM/SYSTEM/ComtrolSet002/Enum/PCI/VEN&8086_DEV....where one of the devices listed is described as an Intel(R) 82801BA/BAM SMBus Controller - 2443, which I know correctly identifies my Intel 850 chipset. So my mb is automatically covered by Win2k, but then my machine is 10 years old. You shouldn't have to worry about thr 'inf' file for VGA as its driver is supplied by bootvid.dll which automatically supplies the VGA You don't have to uninstall Nvidia drivers as only the dll file is loaded and not the Vvidia drivers. It's the same file for Win2k in 'Safe' or even 'VGA' mode on the F8 menu when you boot. The fact that even VGA is corrupted suggests a chipset problem or a problem card, but before cosidering the latter.... I suggest doing a fresh re-install (partition and format) using ECS drivers to start with. Make sure the correct chipset driver is the first one you you install after Win2k sps installs. Hopefully that will fix the problem. When you've installed all the basic drivers, ie sound, video, do a backup of your system state (NTBackup. That's saved me many a time when the odd problem comes along My present system is a dual boot system, Win98SE-Win2k SP4. Thanks for that advice Frank, but I'm afraid formating and doing a fresh clean install of Win2kSP4 is way too much work with all the updates and reinstalling all of my programs. It may well fix the problem I'm having, but I will just put up with the minor inconvenience that I now have (as long as I don't need to install new vid drivers or go into Safe mode). I also have two of those cards (7600GT) and both have the same problem. Haven't tried older Nvidea drivers though. I also reinstalled the ECS AGP drivers and changed the refresh rate of my LCD monitor from 75Hz to 60Hz with no difference with the problem. I also just installed the Nvidea 94.24 drivers over the Omega drivers. Slight change in color, but the same problem. Probably a corrupt or missing file somewhere in my Win2k OS. Win 2k is very stable but I believe I will be building a new PC with Win7 before next winter. Any suggestions? I do like playing Q3 online and some of the older games like Half-Life, Doom3, Unreal Tournament, Halo, etc. Thanks, Buffalo Not sure if this would work: In the normal mode, under Display properties change the resolution to 800?600 temporarily (safe mode default) Click Advanced/Adapter/ Click List all modes.. and select a [resolution + refresh rate + color mode setting] for that particular resolution (note down the original setting before changing to revert back later). Click OK and Restart to safe mode for any improvement. You can always add this to the list of not workable if it fails! I think it is possible to apply higher resolution and color mode for safe mode though never tried. -- /Mohan/ |
#8
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Safe Mode Display
Buffalo wrote:
Frank wrote: Buffalo wrote: Interesting. I just reinstalled my agp drivers from ECS with no difference. (EliteGroup mb K7s5a ver 3.1) What specific mb drivers did Win2K install? Interesting that a reinstall of Win2kSP4 fixed it for awhile. Was that a fresh (clean) install, or just an install over the top? I may just reinstall all my MB drivers. I can't seem to find the Standard PCI VGA Display Drivers.inf file on my computer. When I uninstall my vid drivers and reboot, the display is so corrupted with incomplete objects and tearing, when I moved the mouse pointer, that I had a hard time installing the vid drivers again. I finally got it down to a point where I knew what to do and what to click on to complete the install, even though I couldn't read what was happening. The biggest problem was that the install would stop because there was a screen behind the install screen that stated the drivers were not certified and asked if I wanted to install them anyways. Since I couldn't see it, I couldn't get the drivers installed. Later, I knew it was there and worked around it. Thanks for you input. There's a whole load of chipset drivers for all machines up to 2003 that Win2k covers If you look at machine.inf file (under WINNT) they are listed in there. Eg I have an Intel chipset 850 in my machine. The actual reference to my chipset driver is listed in the registry under HKLM/SYSTEM/ComtrolSet002/Enum/PCI/VEN&8086_DEV....where one of the devices listed is described as an Intel(R) 82801BA/BAM SMBus Controller - 2443, which I know correctly identifies my Intel 850 chipset. So my mb is automatically covered by Win2k, but then my machine is 10 years old. You shouldn't have to worry about thr 'inf' file for VGA as its driver is supplied by bootvid.dll which automatically supplies the VGA You don't have to uninstall Nvidia drivers as only the dll file is loaded and not the Vvidia drivers. It's the same file for Win2k in 'Safe' or even 'VGA' mode on the F8 menu when you boot. The fact that even VGA is corrupted suggests a chipset problem or a problem card, but before cosidering the latter.... I suggest doing a fresh re-install (partition and format) using ECS drivers to start with. Make sure the correct chipset driver is the first one you you install after Win2k sps installs. Hopefully that will fix the problem. When you've installed all the basic drivers, ie sound, video, do a backup of your system state (NTBackup. That's saved me many a time when the odd problem comes along My present system is a dual boot system, Win98SE-Win2k SP4. Thanks for that advice Frank, but I'm afraid formating and doing a fresh clean install of Win2kSP4 is way too much work with all the updates and reinstalling all of my programs. It may well fix the problem I'm having, but I will just put up with the minor inconvenience that I now have (as long as I don't need to install new vid drivers or go into Safe mode). I also have two of those cards (7600GT) and both have the same problem. Haven't tried older Nvidea drivers though. I also reinstalled the ECS AGP drivers and changed the refresh rate of my LCD monitor from 75Hz to 60Hz with no difference with the problem. I also just installed the Nvidea 94.24 drivers over the Omega drivers. Slight change in color, but the same problem. Probably a corrupt or missing file somewhere in my Win2k OS. Win 2k is very stable but I believe I will be building a new PC with Win7 before next winter. Any suggestions? I do like playing Q3 online and some of the older games like Half-Life, Doom3, Unreal Tournament, Halo, etc. Thanks, Buffalo For Win2K, there really aren't all that many updates. You have your initial Win2K install, then install SP4 service pack. I have a slipstreamed CD I made, so when reinstalling, I'm already at Win2K SP4. (I made mine with Autostreamer.) Then there's the Update Rollup, which is like a miniature service pack. And that's about it. Since they no longer support Windows Update for Win2K, I don't think you can do anything from that point of view. http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/d...displaylang=en You'd still need some DirectX installs for the games, but the games sometimes do that for you, during installation. If you have backup software, you could always back up your current setup, and try a clean install and see how it goes. If it isn't looking any better, then you can restore what you've currently got installed. Paul |
#9
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Safe Mode Display
Paul wrote: Buffalo wrote: Frank wrote: Buffalo wrote: Interesting. I just reinstalled my agp drivers from ECS with no difference. (EliteGroup mb K7s5a ver 3.1) What specific mb drivers did Win2K install? Interesting that a reinstall of Win2kSP4 fixed it for awhile. Was that a fresh (clean) install, or just an install over the top? I may just reinstall all my MB drivers. I can't seem to find the Standard PCI VGA Display Drivers.inf file on my computer. When I uninstall my vid drivers and reboot, the display is so corrupted with incomplete objects and tearing, when I moved the mouse pointer, that I had a hard time installing the vid drivers again. I finally got it down to a point where I knew what to do and what to click on to complete the install, even though I couldn't read what was happening. The biggest problem was that the install would stop because there was a screen behind the install screen that stated the drivers were not certified and asked if I wanted to install them anyways. Since I couldn't see it, I couldn't get the drivers installed. Later, I knew it was there and worked around it. Thanks for you input. There's a whole load of chipset drivers for all machines up to 2003 that Win2k covers If you look at machine.inf file (under WINNT) they are listed in there. Eg I have an Intel chipset 850 in my machine. The actual reference to my chipset driver is listed in the registry under HKLM/SYSTEM/ComtrolSet002/Enum/PCI/VEN&8086_DEV....where one of the devices listed is described as an Intel(R) 82801BA/BAM SMBus Controller - 2443, which I know correctly identifies my Intel 850 chipset. So my mb is automatically covered by Win2k, but then my machine is 10 years old. You shouldn't have to worry about thr 'inf' file for VGA as its driver is supplied by bootvid.dll which automatically supplies the VGA You don't have to uninstall Nvidia drivers as only the dll file is loaded and not the Vvidia drivers. It's the same file for Win2k in 'Safe' or even 'VGA' mode on the F8 menu when you boot. The fact that even VGA is corrupted suggests a chipset problem or a problem card, but before cosidering the latter.... I suggest doing a fresh re-install (partition and format) using ECS drivers to start with. Make sure the correct chipset driver is the first one you you install after Win2k sps installs. Hopefully that will fix the problem. When you've installed all the basic drivers, ie sound, video, do a backup of your system state (NTBackup. That's saved me many a time when the odd problem comes along My present system is a dual boot system, Win98SE-Win2k SP4. Thanks for that advice Frank, but I'm afraid formating and doing a fresh clean install of Win2kSP4 is way too much work with all the updates and reinstalling all of my programs. It may well fix the problem I'm having, but I will just put up with the minor inconvenience that I now have (as long as I don't need to install new vid drivers or go into Safe mode). I also have two of those cards (7600GT) and both have the same problem. Haven't tried older Nvidea drivers though. I also reinstalled the ECS AGP drivers and changed the refresh rate of my LCD monitor from 75Hz to 60Hz with no difference with the problem. I also just installed the Nvidea 94.24 drivers over the Omega drivers. Slight change in color, but the same problem. Probably a corrupt or missing file somewhere in my Win2k OS. Win 2k is very stable but I believe I will be building a new PC with Win7 before next winter. Any suggestions? I do like playing Q3 online and some of the older games like Half-Life, Doom3, Unreal Tournament, Halo, etc. Thanks, Buffalo For Win2K, there really aren't all that many updates. You have your initial Win2K install, then install SP4 service pack. I have a slipstreamed CD I made, so when reinstalling, I'm already at Win2K SP4. (I made mine with Autostreamer.) Then there's the Update Rollup, which is like a miniature service pack. And that's about it. Since they no longer support Windows Update for Win2K, I don't think you can do anything from that point of view. http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/d...displaylang=en You'd still need some DirectX installs for the games, but the games sometimes do that for you, during installation. If you have backup software, you could always back up your current setup, and try a clean install and see how it goes. If it isn't looking any better, then you can restore what you've currently got installed. Paul Yep, I have a backup to an external HDD. But, I only have one HDD in my PC and it is a dual boot 98se-win2k system and I would really hate to screw it up. I am not familar enough with doing a complete deletion and format of just one partition to justify possibly screwing up my whole system. There has to be a solid reason why I am having these problems. I think it either has to be an OS problem or a video driver problem. Thanks again, Buffalo |
#10
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Safe Mode Display
On 5/4/2012 6:59 PM, Buffalo wrote:
Yep, I have a backup to an external HDD. But, I only have one HDD in my PC and it is a dual boot 98se-win2k system and I would really hate to screw it up. I am not familar enough with doing a complete deletion and format of just one partition to justify possibly screwing up my whole system. Respectfully, Buffalo ... just an observation, if you have that little confidence in your backup/restore process then you really don't have a reliable backup system. It would be worth addressing that as soon as you can, quite apart from your other problems. I have many OS partitions on many machines, all backed up (though perhaps not as up-to-date as they should be in some cases). I wouldn't think twice about wiping a partition for a re-install with a view to a possible later restore. |
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