New MB & CPU

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Guest

I've replaced the above, and of course have been having many problems. I've
tried to run a "repair", but I get a screen that says "BAD_POOL_CALLER". I
went on the Help and Support pages for troubleshooting the Startup. It had me
disable device drivers, and re-boot.

Now, I can't boot into anything, including Safe Mode. I'm totally stuck.
 
Martin said:
I've replaced the above, and of course have been having many problems. I've
tried to run a "repair", but I get a screen that says "BAD_POOL_CALLER". I
went on the Help and Support pages for troubleshooting the Startup. It had me
disable device drivers, and re-boot.

Now, I can't boot into anything, including Safe Mode. I'm totally stuck.


Normally, and assuming a retail license (many OEM installations
and licenses are not transferable to a new motherboard - check yours
before starting), unless the new motherboard is virtually identical
(same chipset, same IDE controllers, same BIOS version, etc.) to the
one on which the WinXP installation was originally performed, you'll
need to perform a repair (a.k.a. in-place upgrade) installation, at
the very least:

How to Perform an In-Place Upgrade of Windows XP
http://support.microsoft.com/directory/article.asp?ID=KB;EN-US;Q315341

The "why" is quite simple, really, and has nothing to do with
licensing issues, per se; it's a purely technical matter, at this
point. You've pulled the proverbial hardware rug out from under the
OS. (If you don't like -- or get -- the rug analogy, think of it as
picking up a Cape Cod style home and then setting it down onto a Ranch
style foundation. It just isn't going to fit.) WinXP, like Win2K
before it, is not nearly as "promiscuous" as Win9x when it comes to
accepting any old hardware configuration you throw at it. On
installation it "tailors" itself to the specific hardware found. This
is one of the reasons that the entire WinNT/2K/XP OS family is so much
more stable than the Win9x group.

As always when undertaking such a significant change, back up any
important data before starting.

--

Bruce Chambers

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