Blue screen when starting vista

R

Roberto Baggio

LOL!

I believe Vista has a memory diagnostic utility on the DVD that you can
access by booting off the DVD.
 
R

Rock

I

Intel Inside

"I think its time to start looking at your hardware"
Good advice - look carefully, good lighting helps.
 
G

Guest

I just tried Windows Memory Diagnostic tool,and it didnt help me. Blue screen
continues.
Perhaps I should try other memory diagnostic tools?
 
R

Ray

No no no, put the programs onto floppy and they'll run from there when you
boot up.

Ray
 
C

Chad Harris

After checking memory sticks, pins seated correctly, and you might try
unplugging and replugging the IDE pin connections--there are systems that
need ancillary drivers in setup but to my knowledge, most of this has been
taken care of in the latest builds:


Try F8 Win Adv Options & Win RE:

Do this:

I always try to F8 to the Windows Adv Options Menu>try 3 safe modes there (I
don't use WGA) and Last Known Good>then I go to Win RE in Vista. That gives
you a choice of Safe Mode, Safe Mode with Networking,and Safe Mode with
Command Prompt.

You will need this reference:

How to start the System Restore tool at a command prompt in Windows XP
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/304449/en-us

The command to use for system restore at the safe mode cmd prompt is:

%systemroot%\system32\restore\rstrui.exe

The reason for doing this is one of these choices may work, when the other
doesn't. My experience is that people do not fully try F8 when they think
or have said they have. It is that they can almost always reach Windows
Advanced Options though.

I would note an important problem seems to be emerging in Vista as more and
more people try Win RE. It does not seem to have the success rate that a
Repair Install from genuine MSFT Media does in XP, and as builds of Vista
march onto RTM, Desmond Lee (Product Manager for Win RE's) team seems to be
unable to fix this. I am not sure Mr. Sinofsky knows what this is or is
that curious to learn. I am sure Mr. Allchin does.

What It Can Do:

If you run Win RE's Startup Repair in Vista, it will try to check and repair
the following and we're taking about under three minutes usually when it
works which is often: (this is not a complete list but a list of major tasks
it can perform):

Registry Corruptions

Missing/corrupt driver files (you don't have to guess here--it looks at all
of them

Missing/corrupt system files (disabled in Beta 2 as is System File Checker
but present newer builds)

Incompatible Driver Installation

Incompatible OS update installations

Startup Repair may offer a dialogue box to use System restore.

How to Use Startup Repair:

***Accessing Windows RE (Repair Environment):***

1) Insert Media into PC (the DVD you burned)

2) ***You will see on the Vista logo setup screen after lang. options in the
lower left corner, a link called "System Recovery Options."***

Screenshot: System Recovery Options (Lower Left Link)
http://blogs.itecn.net/photos/liuhui/images/2014/500x375.aspx

Screenshot: (Click first option "Startup Repair"
http://www.leedesmond.com/images/img_vista02ctp-installSysRecOpt2.bmp

3) Select your OS for repair.

4) Its been my experience that you can see some causes of the crash from
theWin RE feature:

You'll have a choice there of using:

1) Startup Repair
2) System Restore
3) Complete PC Restore

Good luck,

CH
 
W

William

Try removing the memory and then putting it back in, making certain that it is properly seated. Do the same with an cards in the expansion slots.

William
I just tried Windows Memory Diagnostic tool,and it didnt help me. Blue screen
continues.
Perhaps I should try other memory diagnostic tools?
 
C

Clark

My blue screen was caused by a modem driver that was installed by Windows
update after the initial setup. Build 5600 did not do this, but 5728 did.
Try starting in Safe Mode and uninstall some of the devices. Maybe you will
find the one causing the problem.

Clark
 
I

Intel Inside

You stated previously "I just tried Windows Memory Diagnostic tool,and it
didnt help me" -- Make up your mind...
Is your name Kevin by the way?
 
I

Intel Inside

"now seems it did"
Well we'll assume then that it found errors in the RAM because you are not
very forthcoming with your diagnosis.
 
R

Rock

After first restart it didnt help, but now seems it did.
My name is not Kevin.

Running the memory diagnostics doesn't fix anything. It just tells you if
there is a problem with the ram. If there is you change out ram. So if
you're saying you ran the memory diagnostics, did nothing else, and now the
system is running ok, it's not because you ran the diagnostics.
 
I

Intel Inside

Rock said:
Running the memory diagnostics doesn't fix anything. It just tells you if
there is a problem with the ram. If there is you change out ram. So if
you're saying you ran the memory diagnostics, did nothing else, and now
the system is running ok, it's not because you ran the diagnostics.

"it's not because you ran the diagnostics."
True, very true. It's sad if he thinks the diagnostics did fix it.
 

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