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#1
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BSOD
If you don't want to read this somewhat long post, here's a question you can
answer (but does not solve the answer which is in the rest of the post): Can you provide me with a document or website or something that has a lookup table, so I can reference the hexidecimal numbers in the STOP message on a BSOD screen to an actual error message in english? If you are willing to help me with my problem: Yes, I'm reposting this message. I've isolated the problem, I think, but I need verification (or other ideas). I've been getting this BSOD message for months (granted, only about once a month, but I'm getting it nonetheless): *** STOP: 0x0000007E (0xC0000005, 0x80515F86, 0xF9E84C0C, 0xF9E8490C) No error message (like IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL) accompanies the message. Recommendation says to check hardware, hardware drivers, and software drivers (like firewalls, etc.). I had been getting this message whenever my computer goes into automatic standby (after 15 minutes) when I overclocked my system from 2.4GHz to 2.95GHz. If I told it to go to standby (start-turn off-standby) it would turn on fine, but automatic standby didn't work as well. I have now de-overclocked the system (all settings back to normal) and I'm still getting this problem. As I had overclocked it the second day I got my motherboard, I don't know if overclocking caused the problem or if it had existed prior to overclocking. I believe I may have isolated the problem. I have been noticing lately that after an automatic standby, sometimes my system will turn on but the monitor will not turn on (the LED remains yellow, indicating no signal). I would then have to restart my computer (reset button) to get it to work again. Therefore, I believe that the video card or its driver may be causing the problem. Do you agree? I tried to enter the STOP message into the knowledge base (support.microsoft.com) to see if they had my error message (or something vaguely similar). While there are many STOP 0x0000007E messages, none of them apply to me or apply enough to me for me to care. I checked any that said STOP 0x0000007E and talked about standby, video cards, or computers which stop responding. I did not check any which applied to a specific computer (like ones that said "Dell XPS B533R Computer Stops Responding....) or ones that didn't apply to Windows XP. Any other ideas on what to search? I believe that there's a website that actually gives you like a lookup table to find out what the error really meant, but I couldn't find it. Finally, I went to Windows Update (windowsupdate.microsoft.com) to see if I could pull up a new device driver. There was one, for my video card (coincidence?). I installed it, but I'll have to wait until the next time my computer goes into standby to find out if it worked. Does anyone know actually what that video card driver fixed? Thanks for any help. System specs follow: Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-8SQ800 CPU: 2.4GHz Pentium 4 Northwood (533MHz FSB) Memory: 1x256MB Corsair High-Performance DDR400* Primary Master: Maxtor 80GB 7200RPM 8MB Cache ATA/133 Primary Slave: None Secondary Master: Generic 56x Max CD-ROM Secondary Slave: None Floppy Drive: Generic 1.44MB 3.5" Floppy LPT1: HP Deskjet 722C** COM1: Palm Hotsync Cradle COM2: None AC'97: Speakers Not Attached PS/2 Keyboard: HP Something-or-other :-) PS/2 Mouse: Microsoft Optical WheelMouse AGP 8x Port: Empty? PCI1: BFG Asylum 64MB DDR333 (NVidia GeForce4 MX440-SE) PCI2: Creative SoundBlaster PCI512? PCI3: Linksys Instant PCI Wireless Network Card (WMP11?) PCI4: Empty PCI5: Empty Rear Panel USB1: Yamaha CRW3200UXZ (CD-RW 10x/24x/40x) Rear Panel USB2: Logitech Wingman Extreme Motherboard pin connectors allow for 2 more USB ports and 3 firewire ports, but I do not have the sister cards connected to allow for them, nor do I have any hardware which would require them. * While Corsair RAM has been labled as commonly incompatible with Gigabyte boards, I have had pretty good experiences with it (extremely few lockups, no crashes other than this BSOD screen) and I have run MemTest86 (www.memtest86.com) several times, and that has indicated that the RAM is perfectly functioning. ** While this piece of hardware is extremely old, I have made sure to use both the 722C driver (which XP confuses with the 720C driver, and asks you which one you would like to use), and I have made sure to use a signed driver (XP certified). ? I plan to take advantage of this soon... ? Attached to the sound card is a set of Creative Inspire 4.1 speakers. Not like this is important, just thought I'd say it. Thanks for the help (and for reading this extremely long post) -- MiniDisc_2k2 |
#2
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Also using WinXP Home SP1.
Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-8SQ800 CPU: 2.4GHz Pentium 4 Northwood (533MHz FSB) Memory: 1x256MB Corsair High-Performance DDR400* Primary Master: Maxtor 80GB 7200RPM 8MB Cache ATA/133 Primary Slave: None Secondary Master: Generic 56x Max CD-ROM Secondary Slave: None Floppy Drive: Generic 1.44MB 3.5" Floppy LPT1: HP Deskjet 722C** COM1: Palm Hotsync Cradle COM2: None AC'97: Speakers Not Attached PS/2 Keyboard: HP Something-or-other :-) PS/2 Mouse: Microsoft Optical WheelMouse AGP 8x Port: Empty? PCI1: BFG Asylum 64MB DDR333 (NVidia GeForce4 MX440-SE) PCI2: Creative SoundBlaster PCI512? PCI3: Linksys Instant PCI Wireless Network Card (WMP11?) PCI4: Empty PCI5: Empty Rear Panel USB1: Yamaha CRW3200UXZ (CD-RW 10x/24x/40x) Rear Panel USB2: Logitech Wingman Extreme Motherboard pin connectors allow for 2 more USB ports and 3 firewire ports, but I do not have the sister cards connected to allow for them, nor do I have any hardware which would require them. * While Corsair RAM has been labled as commonly incompatible with Gigabyte boards, I have had pretty good experiences with it (extremely few lockups, no crashes other than this BSOD screen) and I have run MemTest86 (www.memtest86.com) several times, and that has indicated that the RAM is perfectly functioning. ** While this piece of hardware is extremely old, I have made sure to use both the 722C driver (which XP confuses with the 720C driver, and asks you which one you would like to use), and I have made sure to use a signed driver (XP certified). ? I plan to take advantage of this soon... ? Attached to the sound card is a set of Creative Inspire 4.1 speakers. Not like this is important, just thought I'd say it. Thanks for the help (and for reading this extremely long post) -- MiniDisc_2k2 |
#3
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I think it might be the sound card and/or driver... Try here for work
around... http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=321637 "MiniDisc_2k2" wrote in message news:wp3Qa.3412$zd4.529@lakeread02... Also using WinXP Home SP1. Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-8SQ800 CPU: 2.4GHz Pentium 4 Northwood (533MHz FSB) Memory: 1x256MB Corsair High-Performance DDR400* Primary Master: Maxtor 80GB 7200RPM 8MB Cache ATA/133 Primary Slave: None Secondary Master: Generic 56x Max CD-ROM Secondary Slave: None Floppy Drive: Generic 1.44MB 3.5" Floppy LPT1: HP Deskjet 722C** COM1: Palm Hotsync Cradle COM2: None AC'97: Speakers Not Attached PS/2 Keyboard: HP Something-or-other :-) PS/2 Mouse: Microsoft Optical WheelMouse AGP 8x Port: Empty? PCI1: BFG Asylum 64MB DDR333 (NVidia GeForce4 MX440-SE) PCI2: Creative SoundBlaster PCI512? PCI3: Linksys Instant PCI Wireless Network Card (WMP11?) PCI4: Empty PCI5: Empty Rear Panel USB1: Yamaha CRW3200UXZ (CD-RW 10x/24x/40x) Rear Panel USB2: Logitech Wingman Extreme Motherboard pin connectors allow for 2 more USB ports and 3 firewire ports, but I do not have the sister cards connected to allow for them, nor do I have any hardware which would require them. * While Corsair RAM has been labled as commonly incompatible with Gigabyte boards, I have had pretty good experiences with it (extremely few lockups, no crashes other than this BSOD screen) and I have run MemTest86 (www.memtest86.com) several times, and that has indicated that the RAM is perfectly functioning. ** While this piece of hardware is extremely old, I have made sure to use both the 722C driver (which XP confuses with the 720C driver, and asks you which one you would like to use), and I have made sure to use a signed driver (XP certified). ? I plan to take advantage of this soon... ? Attached to the sound card is a set of Creative Inspire 4.1 speakers. Not like this is important, just thought I'd say it. Thanks for the help (and for reading this extremely long post) -- MiniDisc_2k2 |
#4
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-
MiniDisc_2k2 stood up, at show-n-tell, and said: If you don't want to read this somewhat long post, here's a question you can answer (but does not solve the answer which is in the rest of the post): Can you provide me with a document or website or something that has a lookup table, so I can reference the hexidecimal numbers in the STOP message on a BSOD screen to an actual error message in english? My best results, in this matter, used to be the winblows KB. I'd paste the hex number and do a search. Seems they've changed their search function, recently, though. Dunno if it works well, anymore for that purpose. Still reading your post. May, or may not, reply again. If you are willing to help me with my problem: Yes, I'm reposting this message. I've isolated the problem, I think, but I need verification (or other ideas). I've been getting this BSOD message for months (granted, only about once a month, but I'm getting it nonetheless): *** STOP: 0x0000007E (0xC0000005, 0x80515F86, 0xF9E84C0C, 0xF9E8490C) No error message (like IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL) accompanies the message. Recommendation says to check hardware, hardware drivers, and software drivers (like firewalls, etc.). I had been getting this message whenever my computer goes into automatic standby (after 15 minutes) when I overclocked my system from 2.4GHz to 2.95GHz. If I told it to go to standby (start-turn off-standby) it would turn on fine, but automatic standby didn't work as well. I have now de-overclocked the system (all settings back to normal) and I'm still getting this problem. As I had overclocked it the second day I got my motherboard, I don't know if overclocking caused the problem or if it had existed prior to overclocking. I believe I may have isolated the problem. I have been noticing lately that after an automatic standby, sometimes my system will turn on but the monitor will not turn on (the LED remains yellow, indicating no signal). I would then have to restart my computer (reset button) to get it to work again. Therefore, I believe that the video card or its driver may be causing the problem. Do you agree? I tried to enter the STOP message into the knowledge base (support.microsoft.com) to see if they had my error message (or something vaguely similar). While there are many STOP 0x0000007E messages, none of them apply to me or apply enough to me for me to care. I checked any that said STOP 0x0000007E and talked about standby, video cards, or computers which stop responding. I did not check any which applied to a specific computer (like ones that said "Dell XPS B533R Computer Stops Responding....) or ones that didn't apply to Windows XP. Any other ideas on what to search? I believe that there's a website that actually gives you like a lookup table to find out what the error really meant, but I couldn't find it. Finally, I went to Windows Update (windowsupdate.microsoft.com) to see if I could pull up a new device driver. There was one, for my video card (coincidence?). I installed it, but I'll have to wait until the next time my computer goes into standby to find out if it worked. Does anyone know actually what that video card driver fixed? Thanks for any help. System specs follow: Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-8SQ800 CPU: 2.4GHz Pentium 4 Northwood (533MHz FSB) Memory: 1x256MB Corsair High-Performance DDR400* Primary Master: Maxtor 80GB 7200RPM 8MB Cache ATA/133 Primary Slave: None Secondary Master: Generic 56x Max CD-ROM Secondary Slave: None Floppy Drive: Generic 1.44MB 3.5" Floppy LPT1: HP Deskjet 722C** COM1: Palm Hotsync Cradle COM2: None AC'97: Speakers Not Attached PS/2 Keyboard: HP Something-or-other :-) PS/2 Mouse: Microsoft Optical WheelMouse AGP 8x Port: Empty? PCI1: BFG Asylum 64MB DDR333 (NVidia GeForce4 MX440-SE) PCI2: Creative SoundBlaster PCI512? PCI3: Linksys Instant PCI Wireless Network Card (WMP11?) PCI4: Empty PCI5: Empty Rear Panel USB1: Yamaha CRW3200UXZ (CD-RW 10x/24x/40x) Rear Panel USB2: Logitech Wingman Extreme Motherboard pin connectors allow for 2 more USB ports and 3 firewire ports, but I do not have the sister cards connected to allow for them, nor do I have any hardware which would require them. * While Corsair RAM has been labled as commonly incompatible with Gigabyte boards, I have had pretty good experiences with it (extremely few lockups, no crashes other than this BSOD screen) and I have run MemTest86 (www.memtest86.com) several times, and that has indicated that the RAM is perfectly functioning. ** While this piece of hardware is extremely old, I have made sure to use both the 722C driver (which XP confuses with the 720C driver, and asks you which one you would like to use), and I have made sure to use a signed driver (XP certified). ? I plan to take advantage of this soon... ? Attached to the sound card is a set of Creative Inspire 4.1 speakers. Not like this is important, just thought I'd say it. Thanks for the help (and for reading this extremely long post) -- Strontium "Shortcuts are self-defeating. Mean. If you cannot do it, clean, you'll never reach your reward..." - 311 |
#5
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Actually, just did a search on the first string, of that error code. Gave
me some hits. They are very specific, though. A lot of 'when' type deals. Do a KB search at: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx - MiniDisc_2k2 stood up, at show-n-tell, and said: If you don't want to read this somewhat long post, here's a question you can answer (but does not solve the answer which is in the rest of the post): Can you provide me with a document or website or something that has a lookup table, so I can reference the hexidecimal numbers in the STOP message on a BSOD screen to an actual error message in english? If you are willing to help me with my problem: Yes, I'm reposting this message. I've isolated the problem, I think, but I need verification (or other ideas). I've been getting this BSOD message for months (granted, only about once a month, but I'm getting it nonetheless): *** STOP: 0x0000007E (0xC0000005, 0x80515F86, 0xF9E84C0C, 0xF9E8490C) No error message (like IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL) accompanies the message. Recommendation says to check hardware, hardware drivers, and software drivers (like firewalls, etc.). I had been getting this message whenever my computer goes into automatic standby (after 15 minutes) when I overclocked my system from 2.4GHz to 2.95GHz. If I told it to go to standby (start-turn off-standby) it would turn on fine, but automatic standby didn't work as well. I have now de-overclocked the system (all settings back to normal) and I'm still getting this problem. As I had overclocked it the second day I got my motherboard, I don't know if overclocking caused the problem or if it had existed prior to overclocking. I believe I may have isolated the problem. I have been noticing lately that after an automatic standby, sometimes my system will turn on but the monitor will not turn on (the LED remains yellow, indicating no signal). I would then have to restart my computer (reset button) to get it to work again. Therefore, I believe that the video card or its driver may be causing the problem. Do you agree? I tried to enter the STOP message into the knowledge base (support.microsoft.com) to see if they had my error message (or something vaguely similar). While there are many STOP 0x0000007E messages, none of them apply to me or apply enough to me for me to care. I checked any that said STOP 0x0000007E and talked about standby, video cards, or computers which stop responding. I did not check any which applied to a specific computer (like ones that said "Dell XPS B533R Computer Stops Responding....) or ones that didn't apply to Windows XP. Any other ideas on what to search? I believe that there's a website that actually gives you like a lookup table to find out what the error really meant, but I couldn't find it. Finally, I went to Windows Update (windowsupdate.microsoft.com) to see if I could pull up a new device driver. There was one, for my video card (coincidence?). I installed it, but I'll have to wait until the next time my computer goes into standby to find out if it worked. Does anyone know actually what that video card driver fixed? Thanks for any help. System specs follow: Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-8SQ800 CPU: 2.4GHz Pentium 4 Northwood (533MHz FSB) Memory: 1x256MB Corsair High-Performance DDR400* Primary Master: Maxtor 80GB 7200RPM 8MB Cache ATA/133 Primary Slave: None Secondary Master: Generic 56x Max CD-ROM Secondary Slave: None Floppy Drive: Generic 1.44MB 3.5" Floppy LPT1: HP Deskjet 722C** COM1: Palm Hotsync Cradle COM2: None AC'97: Speakers Not Attached PS/2 Keyboard: HP Something-or-other :-) PS/2 Mouse: Microsoft Optical WheelMouse AGP 8x Port: Empty? PCI1: BFG Asylum 64MB DDR333 (NVidia GeForce4 MX440-SE) PCI2: Creative SoundBlaster PCI512? PCI3: Linksys Instant PCI Wireless Network Card (WMP11?) PCI4: Empty PCI5: Empty Rear Panel USB1: Yamaha CRW3200UXZ (CD-RW 10x/24x/40x) Rear Panel USB2: Logitech Wingman Extreme Motherboard pin connectors allow for 2 more USB ports and 3 firewire ports, but I do not have the sister cards connected to allow for them, nor do I have any hardware which would require them. * While Corsair RAM has been labled as commonly incompatible with Gigabyte boards, I have had pretty good experiences with it (extremely few lockups, no crashes other than this BSOD screen) and I have run MemTest86 (www.memtest86.com) several times, and that has indicated that the RAM is perfectly functioning. ** While this piece of hardware is extremely old, I have made sure to use both the 722C driver (which XP confuses with the 720C driver, and asks you which one you would like to use), and I have made sure to use a signed driver (XP certified). ? I plan to take advantage of this soon... ? Attached to the sound card is a set of Creative Inspire 4.1 speakers. Not like this is important, just thought I'd say it. Thanks for the help (and for reading this extremely long post) -- Strontium "Shortcuts are self-defeating. Mean. If you cannot do it, clean, you'll never reach your reward..." - 311 |
#6
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I had been getting this message whenever my computer goes into automatic
standby (after 15 minutes) when I overclocked my system from 2.4GHz to 2.95GHz. If I told it to go to standby (start-turn off-standby) it would turn on fine, but automatic standby didn't work as well. I have now de-overclocked the system (all settings back to normal) and I'm still getting this problem. As I had overclocked it the second day I got my motherboard, I don't know if overclocking caused the problem or if it had existed prior to overclocking. Have you tried reinstalling windows now the system is declocked? There is a possibility that the first BSOD corrupted a system file that is now giving you grief! ;-) |
#7
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"Lyle Rhodes" wrote in message news%3Qa.44817$OZ2.8366@rwcrnsc54... I think it might be the sound card and/or driver... Try here for work around... http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=321637 "MiniDisc_2k2" wrote in message news:wp3Qa.3412$zd4.529@lakeread02... Also using WinXP Home SP1. Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-8SQ800 CPU: 2.4GHz Pentium 4 Northwood (533MHz FSB) Memory: 1x256MB Corsair High-Performance DDR400* Primary Master: Maxtor 80GB 7200RPM 8MB Cache ATA/133 Primary Slave: None Secondary Master: Generic 56x Max CD-ROM Secondary Slave: None Floppy Drive: Generic 1.44MB 3.5" Floppy LPT1: HP Deskjet 722C** COM1: Palm Hotsync Cradle COM2: None AC'97: Speakers Not Attached PS/2 Keyboard: HP Something-or-other :-) PS/2 Mouse: Microsoft Optical WheelMouse AGP 8x Port: Empty? PCI1: BFG Asylum 64MB DDR333 (NVidia GeForce4 MX440-SE) PCI2: Creative SoundBlaster PCI512? PCI3: Linksys Instant PCI Wireless Network Card (WMP11?) PCI4: Empty PCI5: Empty Rear Panel USB1: Yamaha CRW3200UXZ (CD-RW 10x/24x/40x) Rear Panel USB2: Logitech Wingman Extreme Motherboard pin connectors allow for 2 more USB ports and 3 firewire ports, but I do not have the sister cards connected to allow for them, nor do I have any hardware which would require them. * While Corsair RAM has been labled as commonly incompatible with Gigabyte boards, I have had pretty good experiences with it (extremely few lockups, no crashes other than this BSOD screen) and I have run MemTest86 (www.memtest86.com) several times, and that has indicated that the RAM is perfectly functioning. ** While this piece of hardware is extremely old, I have made sure to use both the 722C driver (which XP confuses with the 720C driver, and asks you which one you would like to use), and I have made sure to use a signed driver (XP certified). ? I plan to take advantage of this soon... ? Attached to the sound card is a set of Creative Inspire 4.1 speakers. Not like this is important, just thought I'd say it. Thanks for the help (and for reading this extremely long post) -- MiniDisc_2k2 "Cause: This behavior may occur if you are using a Creative Labs SoundBlaster 16 Joystick with a game port. and the Ctljystk.sys, version 5.1.2501.0, joystick driver included with Windows XP is being used by the device.. " Don't have it, and my joystick's on USB, not game port. "Workaround: 9. Right-click the Creative SoundBlaster Live (Value) device, and then click Uninstall." Not possible, as I do not have a Creative SoundBlaster card. |
#8
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You're such a sport!
- MiniDisc_2k2 stood up, at show-n-tell, and said: Actually, if you had read my post, you would have noticed that I said I tried that, but none of the solutions applied to my problem. Of course, I said if you didn't read my post I really wouldn't care, so I won't yell at you for it :-). "Strontium" wrote in message ... Actually, just did a search on the first string, of that error code. Gave me some hits. They are very specific, though. A lot of 'when' type deals. Do a KB search at: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx - MiniDisc_2k2 stood up, at show-n-tell, and said: If you don't want to read this somewhat long post, here's a question you can answer (but does not solve the answer which is in the rest of the post): Can you provide me with a document or website or something that has a lookup table, so I can reference the hexidecimal numbers in the STOP message on a BSOD screen to an actual error message in english? If you are willing to help me with my problem: Yes, I'm reposting this message. I've isolated the problem, I think, but I need verification (or other ideas). I've been getting this BSOD message for months (granted, only about once a month, but I'm getting it nonetheless): *** STOP: 0x0000007E (0xC0000005, 0x80515F86, 0xF9E84C0C, 0xF9E8490C) No error message (like IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL) accompanies the message. Recommendation says to check hardware, hardware drivers, and software drivers (like firewalls, etc.). I had been getting this message whenever my computer goes into automatic standby (after 15 minutes) when I overclocked my system from 2.4GHz to 2.95GHz. If I told it to go to standby (start-turn off-standby) it would turn on fine, but automatic standby didn't work as well. I have now de-overclocked the system (all settings back to normal) and I'm still getting this problem. As I had overclocked it the second day I got my motherboard, I don't know if overclocking caused the problem or if it had existed prior to overclocking. I believe I may have isolated the problem. I have been noticing lately that after an automatic standby, sometimes my system will turn on but the monitor will not turn on (the LED remains yellow, indicating no signal). I would then have to restart my computer (reset button) to get it to work again. Therefore, I believe that the video card or its driver may be causing the problem. Do you agree? I tried to enter the STOP message into the knowledge base (support.microsoft.com) to see if they had my error message (or something vaguely similar). While there are many STOP 0x0000007E messages, none of them apply to me or apply enough to me for me to care. I checked any that said STOP 0x0000007E and talked about standby, video cards, or computers which stop responding. I did not check any which applied to a specific computer (like ones that said "Dell XPS B533R Computer Stops Responding....) or ones that didn't apply to Windows XP. Any other ideas on what to search? I believe that there's a website that actually gives you like a lookup table to find out what the error really meant, but I couldn't find it. Finally, I went to Windows Update (windowsupdate.microsoft.com) to see if I could pull up a new device driver. There was one, for my video card (coincidence?). I installed it, but I'll have to wait until the next time my computer goes into standby to find out if it worked. Does anyone know actually what that video card driver fixed? Thanks for any help. System specs follow: Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-8SQ800 CPU: 2.4GHz Pentium 4 Northwood (533MHz FSB) Memory: 1x256MB Corsair High-Performance DDR400* Primary Master: Maxtor 80GB 7200RPM 8MB Cache ATA/133 Primary Slave: None Secondary Master: Generic 56x Max CD-ROM Secondary Slave: None Floppy Drive: Generic 1.44MB 3.5" Floppy LPT1: HP Deskjet 722C** COM1: Palm Hotsync Cradle COM2: None AC'97: Speakers Not Attached PS/2 Keyboard: HP Something-or-other :-) PS/2 Mouse: Microsoft Optical WheelMouse AGP 8x Port: Empty? PCI1: BFG Asylum 64MB DDR333 (NVidia GeForce4 MX440-SE) PCI2: Creative SoundBlaster PCI512? PCI3: Linksys Instant PCI Wireless Network Card (WMP11?) PCI4: Empty PCI5: Empty Rear Panel USB1: Yamaha CRW3200UXZ (CD-RW 10x/24x/40x) Rear Panel USB2: Logitech Wingman Extreme Motherboard pin connectors allow for 2 more USB ports and 3 firewire ports, but I do not have the sister cards connected to allow for them, nor do I have any hardware which would require them. * While Corsair RAM has been labled as commonly incompatible with Gigabyte boards, I have had pretty good experiences with it (extremely few lockups, no crashes other than this BSOD screen) and I have run MemTest86 (www.memtest86.com) several times, and that has indicated that the RAM is perfectly functioning. ** While this piece of hardware is extremely old, I have made sure to use both the 722C driver (which XP confuses with the 720C driver, and asks you which one you would like to use), and I have made sure to use a signed driver (XP certified). ? I plan to take advantage of this soon... ? Attached to the sound card is a set of Creative Inspire 4.1 speakers. Not like this is important, just thought I'd say it. Thanks for the help (and for reading this extremely long post) -- Strontium "Shortcuts are self-defeating. Mean. If you cannot do it, clean, you'll never reach your reward..." - 311 -- Strontium "Shortcuts are self-defeating. Mean. If you cannot do it, clean, you'll never reach your reward..." - 311 |
#9
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Oh, by the way, what browser are you using that lets you customize your
message to say "MiniDisc_2k2 stood up, at show-n-tell, and said:" instead of the customary "'MiniDisc_2k2 wrote in message news:[some wierd number @giganews.com]"? Or did you just replace the message each time? -- MiniDisc_2k2 "Strontium" wrote in message ... You're such a sport! - MiniDisc_2k2 stood up, at show-n-tell, and said: Actually, if you had read my post, you would have noticed that I said I tried that, but none of the solutions applied to my problem. Of course, I said if you didn't read my post I really wouldn't care, so I won't yell at you for it :-). "Strontium" wrote in message ... Actually, just did a search on the first string, of that error code. Gave me some hits. They are very specific, though. A lot of 'when' type deals. Do a KB search at: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx - MiniDisc_2k2 stood up, at show-n-tell, and said: If you don't want to read this somewhat long post, here's a question you can answer (but does not solve the answer which is in the rest of the post): Can you provide me with a document or website or something that has a lookup table, so I can reference the hexidecimal numbers in the STOP message on a BSOD screen to an actual error message in english? If you are willing to help me with my problem: Yes, I'm reposting this message. I've isolated the problem, I think, but I need verification (or other ideas). I've been getting this BSOD message for months (granted, only about once a month, but I'm getting it nonetheless): *** STOP: 0x0000007E (0xC0000005, 0x80515F86, 0xF9E84C0C, 0xF9E8490C) No error message (like IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL) accompanies the message. Recommendation says to check hardware, hardware drivers, and software drivers (like firewalls, etc.). I had been getting this message whenever my computer goes into automatic standby (after 15 minutes) when I overclocked my system from 2.4GHz to 2.95GHz. If I told it to go to standby (start-turn off-standby) it would turn on fine, but automatic standby didn't work as well. I have now de-overclocked the system (all settings back to normal) and I'm still getting this problem. As I had overclocked it the second day I got my motherboard, I don't know if overclocking caused the problem or if it had existed prior to overclocking. I believe I may have isolated the problem. I have been noticing lately that after an automatic standby, sometimes my system will turn on but the monitor will not turn on (the LED remains yellow, indicating no signal). I would then have to restart my computer (reset button) to get it to work again. Therefore, I believe that the video card or its driver may be causing the problem. Do you agree? I tried to enter the STOP message into the knowledge base (support.microsoft.com) to see if they had my error message (or something vaguely similar). While there are many STOP 0x0000007E messages, none of them apply to me or apply enough to me for me to care. I checked any that said STOP 0x0000007E and talked about standby, video cards, or computers which stop responding. I did not check any which applied to a specific computer (like ones that said "Dell XPS B533R Computer Stops Responding....) or ones that didn't apply to Windows XP. Any other ideas on what to search? I believe that there's a website that actually gives you like a lookup table to find out what the error really meant, but I couldn't find it. Finally, I went to Windows Update (windowsupdate.microsoft.com) to see if I could pull up a new device driver. There was one, for my video card (coincidence?). I installed it, but I'll have to wait until the next time my computer goes into standby to find out if it worked. Does anyone know actually what that video card driver fixed? Thanks for any help. System specs follow: Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-8SQ800 CPU: 2.4GHz Pentium 4 Northwood (533MHz FSB) Memory: 1x256MB Corsair High-Performance DDR400* Primary Master: Maxtor 80GB 7200RPM 8MB Cache ATA/133 Primary Slave: None Secondary Master: Generic 56x Max CD-ROM Secondary Slave: None Floppy Drive: Generic 1.44MB 3.5" Floppy LPT1: HP Deskjet 722C** COM1: Palm Hotsync Cradle COM2: None AC'97: Speakers Not Attached PS/2 Keyboard: HP Something-or-other :-) PS/2 Mouse: Microsoft Optical WheelMouse AGP 8x Port: Empty? PCI1: BFG Asylum 64MB DDR333 (NVidia GeForce4 MX440-SE) PCI2: Creative SoundBlaster PCI512? PCI3: Linksys Instant PCI Wireless Network Card (WMP11?) PCI4: Empty PCI5: Empty Rear Panel USB1: Yamaha CRW3200UXZ (CD-RW 10x/24x/40x) Rear Panel USB2: Logitech Wingman Extreme Motherboard pin connectors allow for 2 more USB ports and 3 firewire ports, but I do not have the sister cards connected to allow for them, nor do I have any hardware which would require them. * While Corsair RAM has been labled as commonly incompatible with Gigabyte boards, I have had pretty good experiences with it (extremely few lockups, no crashes other than this BSOD screen) and I have run MemTest86 (www.memtest86.com) several times, and that has indicated that the RAM is perfectly functioning. ** While this piece of hardware is extremely old, I have made sure to use both the 722C driver (which XP confuses with the 720C driver, and asks you which one you would like to use), and I have made sure to use a signed driver (XP certified). ? I plan to take advantage of this soon... ? Attached to the sound card is a set of Creative Inspire 4.1 speakers. Not like this is important, just thought I'd say it. Thanks for the help (and for reading this extremely long post) -- Strontium "Shortcuts are self-defeating. Mean. If you cannot do it, clean, you'll never reach your reward..." - 311 -- Strontium "Shortcuts are self-defeating. Mean. If you cannot do it, clean, you'll never reach your reward..." - 311 |
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In news:UEnQa.4190$zd4.3661@lakeread02,
MiniDisc_2k2 walked into the bar with a grape in each nostril and said to the bartender: :: Oh, by the way, what browser are you using that lets you customize :: your message to say "MiniDisc_2k2 stood up, at show-n-tell, and :: said:" instead of the customary "'MiniDisc_2k2 :: wrote in message news:[some wierd number @giganews.com]"? :: :: Or did you just replace the message each time? That is a freeware program called OE QuoteFix -- -- Matt remove your clothes to email me "It is sort of fascinating that you can have 100 percent certainty about weapons of mass destruction and zero certainty of about where they are." - Hans Blix |
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