On Tue, 13 Dec 2005 15:17:48 GMT, "bravo9" <u16637@uwe>
wrote:
>help!
>i was on the phone with dell all night and no help
>here is my problem,
> just recently i am having problems when viewing any type of video,
>whether it be on the internet, ie6 or aol,or running a dvd in my player
>my games don't run right either.
>the video will start skipping,then
>the monitor starts blinking in and out and then my computer will freeze,
>can't even use alt,ctrl,dele i have to shut the power off
>we (dell and i) went through all the basic steps
> ie..drivers,hard drive, syst.restore..etc..
>they wanted to send me over to software solutions for $99.00
>i said i will call you back...lol
>i have a 1 1/2 year old dimension 8300
>p 4
>3.0ghz
>1g ram
>geforce fx 5200
>now i have it on warranty for hardware,
>but they said that all their tests show that it is software problem
>i did not add any software to the machine in the recent days
> I have no clue what triggered this problem. This only happens with I watch
>videos or play games.
>thanks,for any help from anyone
Reinstall DirectX (version 9c).
Scan the system for spyware/viri/etc, this could be a gross
performance problem but only showing itself during a
demanding use, unlike basic 2D tasks.
Check temps and voltages, preferribly voltages with a
multimeter. If your video card has a fan, check it, clean
if dusty, as well as cleaning dust from intake and exhaust
of case if necessary and checking other fan(s).
Check WIndows Device Manager, and Event Viewer.
Is it doing exact same thing in games?
When you "tried drivers" did you install same older Dell
drivers? If so, try newest nVidia Detonator driver from
http://www.nvidia.com
Also try (temporarily) disabling sound in Device Manager, if
they then play it would seem sound, not video is the cause
and video is only the result. Along with this, if sound is
the problem then reinstall sound driver.
Is it possible the system is merely overheating? A CPU
throttling back might have similar effect, was part of why I
mentioned cleaning and fans above, as well as checking
temps. Any idea of what might've changed prior to the onset
of this, if you had moved the system or if it's on same
circuit as a heavy load like a heater or an appliance with a
large motor?
If the system originall worked playing these same videos,
then after you do a system restore (meaning Dell reload of
factory software after wiping the drive, not a Windows
system restore) then it would seem clearly a hardware, not
software problem. If you can put in another drive or make a
whole-parititon backup to temporarily try a clean Dell
factory installation config, that might be easiest. Once
you have tried a complete new installation they can't then
have a valid claim it's software rather than hardware,
assuming it did work correclty initially.
To isolate variables, I'd limit testing to plaing one video
file stored on your desktop, not introducing more variables
with the DVD or IE, etc. Also check add/remove programs for
anything new or suspicious.