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#31
I didn't see any artifacts, and I had stopped it. When I get back from class I'll upload the reports.
I didn't see any artifacts, and I had stopped it. When I get back from class I'll upload the reports.
I hope that's what you wanted, sorry if it wasn't. Oh and the attached file is a new one.
Last edited by padimus; 19 Apr 2012 at 17:00. Reason: Forgot to add something
Was that crash report collected in Safe Mode? If not, I suspect you have malware/a virus on the system.
Crashes are related to memory and/or Ventrilo.exe
Yeah it was in safemode and if it's related to Ventrilo well then it's just another reason to move on over to mumble haha
Well I'm back! I got a new motherboard and I no longer get random blue screens five minutes after logging on, however after about 30 minutes of playing games (Dota2 and Diablo 3) my computer will begin to lock up for 5-10 seconds. It only does this while playing games. While surfing the web or doing anything else it works fine. It will lock up (usually) about 3 times then will result in a bluescreen with a Kernal Inpage Data Error. I've ran Memtest86+ and the Western Digital lifegaurd test mentioned earlier in the thread and both have found nothing.
Please provide your latest crash reports for analysis.
When I was trying to get this it would close automatically so I rebooted and it worked fine. Before I rebooted it was saying that my HDD was full and now it's at 824gb/931gb, figured it would be worth mentioning.
I do not recall whether I said this yet, but make sure AMD Vision Engine Control Center is not overclocking your graphics card without your knowledge.
Also, if you get messages that your hard disk is full when it is not, that means you should probably defragment the drive. Disk Defragmenter - Open and Use
Windows has some nice command line flags for the defrag command. The -b and -w flags will defrag boot files and the boot registry items as well as compact the data to the center of the disk for faster access.defrag c: -bThe first command optimizes boot performance for the Windows drive by defragmenting boot files and boot registry items.
defrag -c -v -w
The second command includes all drives on the system through the -c command and optimizes the drives by compacting the data to the center of the disk. Verbose output through the -v option is optional to provide the user with more information about the defrag tasks. The commands have to be run in an Elevated Command Prompt.
For more flags, see Disk Defragmenter - Open and Use.
Ok I've defragged and I turned off AMD Overdrive (only thing i could find that might make it overclock without my knowlege
Alright, let us know if you have any new crashes. Best of luck!