System is shutting down

G

Guest

Have a customer that working in several applications and she received a the
following message:

"This system is shutting down., Please save all work in progress and log
off. Any unsaved changes will be lost. This shutdown was initiated by NT
AUTHORITY\SYSTEM. Message - Microsoft Systems Management Server"

I have seen resolutions for RPC errors but nothing for Microsoft Systems
Management Server. We have an SMS server but I am 100% certain that we were
not pushing out that day.

It has not happened again but because the customer is high on the food chain
I don't want this to resurface. Any ideas?

Thanks,
 
G

Guest

....hahahahahaha...followed by a ...lol... you be careful now ya hear...have
you seen Adobe Flash Player or maybe Windows, I'm not a professional, has let
Adobe Flash Player version 6, yes, version 6, files into a computer with a
clean install of Windows XP Home Edition.

http://kb.adobe.com/selfservice/viewContent.do?externalId=tn_14157&sliceId=2

....I applied this cleanup in a clean installation and though webpages still
seem to close slower than I am used to seeing them close I have not had the
problems with IE7 I was having in the previous installation.

I don't know nothin' but I would tend to keep away from that high end
foodchain whatsit if I were you...
 
G

Guest

Can someone pleasssse help!l Whoever replied to my post is being a wiseguy
and I don't have time for games
 
G

Guest

...I'm a wise guy...I didn't even read your question properly...,so have you
got the SP3?
....did you visit here: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sms/bb676774.aspx

I suggested the Adobe Flash Player thing because without reading your post
properly, I presumed I suppose most systems use IE and seeing I recently had
a problem and found old Adobe Flash Player version 6 files in the
Windows/Windows32/Macromedia folder without myself knowing anything about I
again presumed and thought there was something drastically wrong somewhere
and whatever went wrong was never in my end user control, so I used the
advice on the Adobe.com website and problem went away.
Symptoms of the old Flash Player 6 files included constant IE shutdowns,
Windows Explorer closedowns error messages and a finnally computer crash and
I have had no problems since a clean install and an immediate Adobe Flash
cleanout and reinstall.

...I'm not even a professional but if a system shuts down I would first do
a quick check of the software and do all the maintenance checks I forgot
about then check the hardware, looking for loose cables and I may even run
the installed harddrive manufacturers diagnostic software application in LOW
mode so no data is disturbed, but only if I was a bit professional...I may
have a few more suggestions in about 4 or 5 years time...uh oh, there I go
again...and here I go...good luck.

....of course if you don't know the insides of the computer it could be badly
ventilated or overheating for any other reason...you could check the bios for
a shutdown temperature.

Like I said, I'm no professional, just a bit experienced home user.
 
G

Guest

No problem. Thanks for the advise.

umwhat said:
...I'm a wise guy...I didn't even read your question properly...,so have you
got the SP3?
...did you visit here: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sms/bb676774.aspx

I suggested the Adobe Flash Player thing because without reading your post
properly, I presumed I suppose most systems use IE and seeing I recently had
a problem and found old Adobe Flash Player version 6 files in the
Windows/Windows32/Macromedia folder without myself knowing anything about I
again presumed and thought there was something drastically wrong somewhere
and whatever went wrong was never in my end user control, so I used the
advice on the Adobe.com website and problem went away.
Symptoms of the old Flash Player 6 files included constant IE shutdowns,
Windows Explorer closedowns error messages and a finnally computer crash and
I have had no problems since a clean install and an immediate Adobe Flash
cleanout and reinstall.

...I'm not even a professional but if a system shuts down I would first do
a quick check of the software and do all the maintenance checks I forgot
about then check the hardware, looking for loose cables and I may even run
the installed harddrive manufacturers diagnostic software application in LOW
mode so no data is disturbed, but only if I was a bit professional...I may
have a few more suggestions in about 4 or 5 years time...uh oh, there I go
again...and here I go...good luck.

...of course if you don't know the insides of the computer it could be badly
ventilated or overheating for any other reason...you could check the bios for
a shutdown temperature.

Like I said, I'm no professional, just a bit experienced home user.
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top