Many people ask me in forums that “Am I Immune to BSODs, If I Use Vista?” Unluckily, no. A general thought is that blue screens do not even happen in Vista version, but not only are they still appear there, but we are here to make you sure we have observed them first hand. The big news is Microsoft done very much deep work into how Vista cope with major errors and other faults that in earlier OSs would make a system crash. BSOD problems in Vista **www.AmazingIT.blogspot.com** Many times, if a problem starts, Vista tries to fix it without any break. For instance, when a video-card crashes, a message appears “Display driver stopped responding and has recovered.” In Windows XP and earlier OSs, this thing happened in almost each system crash.blue_screen_of_death_vista
In many cases, Vista fails to recover on its own, and start showing a blue screen. By default, Vista reboots itself automatically after shortly flashing the blue screen. The process is so fast you perhaps miss to see it, but once Windows reloads, you will be seeing an error message same like shown above. You can try using the ‘Check for solution’ option; it is a same as you tries your hand while playing the lotto. Neither one results in anything. Rather, scroll down and write down the blue screen codes. Using this detail, you get able to do your own master work. On the other hand, if you would like to see the actual blue screen instead of immediately rebooting, here is the way; click on the My Computer > Properties > Advanced System Settings. In the System Properties window, you will see the Advanced tab, select it, select Settings in Startup and Recovery section, and uncheck the box showing ‘Automatically Restart.’ The same procedure also works in Windows XP. In another nod towards contouring the troubleshooting procedure, Vista’s Problem Reports and Solutions wizard saves lot of time in investigation, as well as informs you to possible problems you were not even aware they are present there. You will see this wizard by name in your Control Panel, or simply open it by typing Problem Reports and Solutions in Vista’s search box. After loading it, click ‘Check for new solutions’ present right in the left-hand column. If Vista sees any potential conflicts, it will show them in the main window, along with suggested solutions. IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL (0×0000000A) The possible reason of this conflict is improperly installed drivers for any hardware you get installed in a recent past. Lets say, if you have installed a webcam couple of days ago, and have been facing BSoDs ever since, begin your detective work with the webcam. First of all, remove/disconnect that specific hardware, and uninstall its drivers. If that solves the blue screen problem, you should get updated drivers or contact the manufacturer. If you have not installed any new hardware in recent days, you will require doing some extra work. Start by looking into the list on blue screen to check if it includes a particular driver. Checking the blue screen, go to the text at the very bottom. You may find a file name. This is the driver that made the crash. If, for instance, the driver possibly causing the problem is nv4_disp.dll (an nVidia-related file), and you have switched from an Nvidia video card to an ATI part some days ago, then it is right to think that either the old driver was not uninstalled completely, or the new drivers were not installed in a proper way.Latest Information Technology
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