win 7 reboots randomly Kernel-Power

Reinstalling the Chipset drivers resolved it for me

Correction: Did NOT Resolve it for me.

I was having the same problems - restarting twice per day as if someone switched the laptop off and on. No bluescreen. I thought it was a power supply issue.

After Googling extensively and reading all these posts (and trying some of the suggestions), I reinstalled all the drivers that came with the laptop - starting with the ChipSet drivers.

The system was stable for 2 whole days - then restarted 3 times in 6 hours.
 
Last edited:

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Prostar/W870CU
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit
CPU
Intel Core i7-620M
Memory
8GB Dual Channel DDR3 SDRAM at 1333MHz - 2 x 4GB
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 280M w/1GB DDR3
Hard Drives
80GB Intel X25-M G2 SATA II Solid State Drive
320/7200rpm GB SATA-300 (SATA II 3GB/s)
I've had the same problem since early January after two months on a new system. It was at least daily for several weeks and then stopped for almost two weeks and it now back, but not every day. Strangely, it has never occurred between 6PM and 7AM. I have virus scans and off site back ups running during those hours as well as in the day time. I replaced my 850 watt power supply and have run a few passes on the memory. The problem typically occurs when I'm out of the room. Give all the posts I've seen on the web, it seems to be somewhat common. I have different hardware from the other posters so I don't think a specific piece of hardware is causing the problem. I'm just posting to give people a gauge of the extent of the problem. I'll try some of the suggestions posted earlier to see if the problem goes away.

Curt

Solved. I've read a lot of threads on this problem and my cause appears to be unique. Operating under the assumption that if some is good, more is better, I connected both my Ethernet ports to the same switch. I thought the OS and the switch would automatically detect that they went to the same system and act accordingly. They don't. If fact, it probably slowed the system down as it had to deal with duplicate packets let alone the random BSOD's. My guess is that it is a driver problem given the dump, but it could be the protocol stack or the OS. I'm much relieved to solve this problem after five months.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium
CPU
Intel i7 920 2.66GHz LGA 1366 Quad cord
Motherboard
EVGA E758-A1 X58 SLI
Memory
3x2 GB Corsair Dominator SDRAM DDR3 1600C8D 8-8-8-24 • - oth
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA GTS 260
Sound Card
motherboad based
Monitor(s) Displays
2 HP LP2745w
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1200
Hard Drives
2 – Western Digital WB RE3 750GB 7200 RPM drives – RAID 1 array for data
1 – Western Digital 80GB 7200 RPM SATA drive – work disk for PhotoShop and page file
PSU
Antec CP-850 power supply
Case
Antec Performance I P183
Cooling
Noctua NH-U12P SE1366
Keyboard
Micrsoft Wireless Natural
Mouse
Microsoft Wireless Natural
Other Info
Built in Ethernet. Drive is Realtek PCIe GBE Family Controller. There are two connections
Advanced power settings

After many months of crashing/blue screen/kernal dump, I belive I have fixed my issue.
Go to Power options/change plan settings/change advanced power settings/processor power mangaement/minimum processor state/set to 100%
I believe the default stting of 5% is not enough to maintain stability running more than 2 gb of ram.
Hope this helps
Cheers EMAIL REMOVED

hey guys i got some problm with windows 7 ultimate x64 it just reboot all the time itself ,already couple days. Already tried fixdisk, firmware on my hd doest need to be flashed at least that what segate instaler told me.i turned off auto reset at system failure,but system resets anyway reboots without blu screen .so just got this from log
<

Event xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/win/2004/08/events/event">
- <System>
<Provider Name="Microsoft-Windows-Kernel-Power" Guid="{331C3B3A-2005-44C2-AC5E-77220C37D6B4}" />

<EventID>41</EventID>

<Version>2</Version>

<Level>1</Level>

<Task>63</Task>

<Opcode>0</Opcode>

<Keywords>0x8000000000000002</Keywords>

<TimeCreated SystemTime="2009-09-16T16:02:10.789625100Z" />

<EventRecordID>5262</EventRecordID>

<Correlation />

<Execution ProcessID="4" ThreadID="8" />

<Channel>System</Channel>

<Computer>Yaro</Computer>

<Security UserID="S-1-5-18" />

</System>


- <EventData>
<Data Name="BugcheckCode">0</Data>

<Data Name="BugcheckParameter1">0x0</Data>

<Data Name="BugcheckParameter2">0x0</Data>

<Data Name="BugcheckParameter3">0x0</Data>

<Data Name="BugcheckParameter4">0x0</Data>

<Data Name="SleepInProgress">false</Data>

<Data Name="PowerButtonTimestamp">0</Data>

</EventData>


</Event>

thx for any help
 
Last edited by a moderator:

My Computer

OS
win764
CPU
i7920
Motherboard
asusrampage11gene
Memory
kingstonx6gb
Graphics Card(s)
gts250
Sound Card
onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
acer
Hard Drives
many
The change of power supply did the trick.... every thing is hunky dory now.

It's been several months since you changed the power supply...has Windows 7 been stable for you thus far? I ask because I'm facing the same problem you did and I'm wondering whether I should change the power supply too...
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home Premium
I just quickly registered on this forum to give you guys a HUGE THANK YOU !!!! My old desktop that I was running as a Windows 2003 server had a crapped out CPU and motherboard so I decided to upgrade to quad core AMD CPU with foxconn internal raid motherboard. I installed Windows 7 ultimate 64-bit and planned on running various virtual machines within that using virtual box. Took me 3 freakin days to set up and configure my virtual Windows 2008 R2 64-bit just right but got everything up and boom, system started restarting giving that same kernel power error.

No matter what, I could not fix it and it was happening on a daily basis. But I did a bunch of google searches and came across this forum thread and the fix for me was upping the voltage for the northbridge one notch in my motherboard overclock settings per the suggestion on this thread.

I have been running my system for 4 days straight without a restart or kernel power error. It is safe to say that did the trick.

Thanks for the fix ! :D
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 ultimate 64-bit with VM Windows 2008 R2 64-bit
This is my first post on the board, and what's being discussed here in this thread is why I joined.

I've been having random reboot problems since the PC was built in March. Although the largest percentage of times the reboot happens is shortly after turning on the PC, it happens at other times too, and it's very random... surfing the net, viewing files, sitting idle, whatever.

I'm not a techie by any stretch, but my father has over 25 years of experience with computers. His thought was that it was my original Nvidia graphics card, so I replaced it with an ATI Radeon HD. It continued to happen, so we rebuilt the computer. Afterwards, it happend less, but was still occuring. At this point, I got so frustrated that I went back to XP.

Then I joined this forum. Lots of things to think about and try. My PS is an Antec 750W, and I just read something negative about their power supplies. However, 750W is a lot of power, isn't it? Read earlier in this thread that someone went from 650 to 700, and that did the trick. Hmm...
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home build
OS
Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core I7 950 3.06GHz
Motherboard
EVGA X58-E758 3X SLI DDR3
Memory
8 GB (4x2) Corsair Dominator DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire ATI Radeon HD 5770 1 GB DDR5
Sound Card
Creative X-FI Sound Blaster XtremeMusic
Monitor(s) Displays
(2) Samsung 2494HM 24" Monitor 1080p
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
- (2)Western Digital 250 GB Caviar Blue SATA
- LG CH08LS10 Super Multi Blue SATA Blu-Ray combo drive w/LightScribe
PSU
Antec 750W
Case
Apevia
Your PS should be adequate for your system.

If you can borrow another one to test with you can rule this out.

You might try bumping your NB voltage (QPI, I think) and/or DRAM voltage, with four RAM cards it sometimes needs a little extra voltage to run stable.

You can test your RAM with memtest86+, check this tutorial for the procedure: RAM - Test with Memtest86+
Be sure to run the tests with one RAM card at a time alternating the slots.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
76~2.0
OS
Windows 7 Ult x64 - SP1/ Windows 8 Pro x64
CPU
Intel Core i5-3570K 4.6GHz
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-Z77X UD3H, f18
Memory
8GB (2X4GB) DDR3 1600 Corsair Vengeance CL8 1.5v
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire HD 7770 Vapor-X OC 1GB DDR5
Sound Card
Onboard VIA VT2021
Monitor(s) Displays
22" LCD Dell
Screen Resolution
1680x1050
Hard Drives
Samsung 840Pro 128GB SSD,
Seagate Barracuda 500GB SATA2 7200rpm 32MB cache, Seagate Barracuda 1TB SATA2 7200rpm 32MB cache,
PSU
Corsair HX650W
Case
Cooler Master Storm Scout
Cooling
Corsair H80 2x12cm Noctua NF P12 , 2x14cm case fans
Keyboard
Logitech Wave
Mouse
CM Sentinel
Internet Speed
Dismal
Antivirus
Avast
Browser
Opera Next
Other Info
Haswell laptop: HP Envy 17t-j, i7-4700MQ, GeForce 740M 2GB DDR3, 17.3" Full HD 1920x1080, 16GB RAM, Samsung 840 Pro 128GB, 1TB Hitachi 7200 HDD,
Desktop: eSATA ports,
External eSATA Seagate 500GB SATA2 7200rpm,
External WD USB 500GB
You might try bumping your NB voltage (QPI, I think) and/or DRAM voltage, with four RAM cards it sometimes needs a little extra voltage to run stable.

You can test your RAM with memtest86+, check this tutorial for the procedure: RAM - Test with Memtest86+
Be sure to run the tests with one RAM card at a time alternating the slots.
I'm not sure what you mean by bumping my NB voltage, but I'll show your reply to my father, and he'll know what to do. Thanks for the reply, and I promise to post my results once I've tried it.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home build
OS
Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core I7 950 3.06GHz
Motherboard
EVGA X58-E758 3X SLI DDR3
Memory
8 GB (4x2) Corsair Dominator DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire ATI Radeon HD 5770 1 GB DDR5
Sound Card
Creative X-FI Sound Blaster XtremeMusic
Monitor(s) Displays
(2) Samsung 2494HM 24" Monitor 1080p
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
- (2)Western Digital 250 GB Caviar Blue SATA
- LG CH08LS10 Super Multi Blue SATA Blu-Ray combo drive w/LightScribe
PSU
Antec 750W
Case
Apevia
Older CPUs and motherboards had a seperate chip to controll the communications among the CPU, RAM, BIOS ROM.

Your "North Bridge" is integrated in the CPU and the BIOS setting that will let you adjust the voltage is usually called QPI.

The northbridge, also known as a memory controller hub (MCH) or an integrated memory controller (IMC) (<<Click here for explaination) in Intel systems (AMD, VIA, SiS and others usually use 'northbridge'), is one of the two chips in the core logic chipset on a PC motherboard, the other being the southbridge.

With a slight increase in voltage this will help the communication between the RAM and CPU.

If it's at 1.1v then change it to 1.2v, this should be enough to help it.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
76~2.0
OS
Windows 7 Ult x64 - SP1/ Windows 8 Pro x64
CPU
Intel Core i5-3570K 4.6GHz
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-Z77X UD3H, f18
Memory
8GB (2X4GB) DDR3 1600 Corsair Vengeance CL8 1.5v
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire HD 7770 Vapor-X OC 1GB DDR5
Sound Card
Onboard VIA VT2021
Monitor(s) Displays
22" LCD Dell
Screen Resolution
1680x1050
Hard Drives
Samsung 840Pro 128GB SSD,
Seagate Barracuda 500GB SATA2 7200rpm 32MB cache, Seagate Barracuda 1TB SATA2 7200rpm 32MB cache,
PSU
Corsair HX650W
Case
Cooler Master Storm Scout
Cooling
Corsair H80 2x12cm Noctua NF P12 , 2x14cm case fans
Keyboard
Logitech Wave
Mouse
CM Sentinel
Internet Speed
Dismal
Antivirus
Avast
Browser
Opera Next
Other Info
Haswell laptop: HP Envy 17t-j, i7-4700MQ, GeForce 740M 2GB DDR3, 17.3" Full HD 1920x1080, 16GB RAM, Samsung 840 Pro 128GB, 1TB Hitachi 7200 HDD,
Desktop: eSATA ports,
External eSATA Seagate 500GB SATA2 7200rpm,
External WD USB 500GB
With a slight increase in voltage this will help the communication between the RAM and CPU.

If it's at 1.1v then change it to 1.2v, this should be enough to help it.
Okay, thanks Dave. I'll give that a try.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home build
OS
Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core I7 950 3.06GHz
Motherboard
EVGA X58-E758 3X SLI DDR3
Memory
8 GB (4x2) Corsair Dominator DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire ATI Radeon HD 5770 1 GB DDR5
Sound Card
Creative X-FI Sound Blaster XtremeMusic
Monitor(s) Displays
(2) Samsung 2494HM 24" Monitor 1080p
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
- (2)Western Digital 250 GB Caviar Blue SATA
- LG CH08LS10 Super Multi Blue SATA Blu-Ray combo drive w/LightScribe
PSU
Antec 750W
Case
Apevia
After many months of crashing/blue screen/kernal dump, I belive I have fixed my issue.
Go to Power options/change plan settings/change advanced power settings/processor power mangaement/minimum processor state/set to 100%
I believe the default stting of 5% is not enough to maintain stability running more than 2 gb of ram.
Okay, I followed through what you did, but after the Processor power management selection, there is no "minimum processor state" option. Only thing there is "system cooling policy", and there is nothing under that menu either.

Could you walk yourself back through this, and tell me if I'm doing something wrong? I get the same menus after "Change plan settings" next to any of the preferred or hidden plans.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home build
OS
Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core I7 950 3.06GHz
Motherboard
EVGA X58-E758 3X SLI DDR3
Memory
8 GB (4x2) Corsair Dominator DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire ATI Radeon HD 5770 1 GB DDR5
Sound Card
Creative X-FI Sound Blaster XtremeMusic
Monitor(s) Displays
(2) Samsung 2494HM 24" Monitor 1080p
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
- (2)Western Digital 250 GB Caviar Blue SATA
- LG CH08LS10 Super Multi Blue SATA Blu-Ray combo drive w/LightScribe
PSU
Antec 750W
Case
Apevia
I had the same problem with the kernel-power 41 issue (bugcheck 0) - replaced the ram and psu but still happened. But finally found the fix: Try this
1st Uninstall your sound driver (mine was Sigmatel) & Reboot
2nd Download DriverSweeper from http://www.phyxion.net/Products/Products/Driver-Sweeper and install it
3rd Tick the ASUS Sound, Creative Sound and Realtek Sound, then press ANALYSE - when the results are shown press CLEAN. Reboot as directed
4th Reinstall correct sound driver for your system - reboot if prompted
And thats it - worked for me
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell XPS 15 (L501x)
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit with SP1
CPU
Intel i7-740QM (6mb cache, 1.73ghz - turboboost 2.93ghz, HT)
Motherboard
Intel HM57
Memory
4GB DDR3 1333mhz Dual Channel
Graphics Card(s)
nVidia GT 435M 2GB GDDR3
Sound Card
Realtek Audio with JBL Speakers, subwoofer & Waves Maxxaudio
Monitor(s) Displays
1920 x 1080 15.4" RGB LED (AUO17ED)
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080 WUGA Truelife Glossy
Hard Drives
120GB OCZ Vertex 2e SSD
500GB Seagate Momentus 7200.4 7200rpm 16mb cache HDD (external)
Cooling
GPU & CPU repasted with Arctic Cooling MX-2
Keyboard
UK Qwerty
Mouse
Synaptics Multi-Touch Touchpad
Internet Speed
ADSL - Download @14365kbs / Upload @ 1145kbs (ISP - Orange)
Other Info
Intel WiMax 6250 a/b/g/n/wimax Card with Intel Centrino vPro
Canon MP640 Printer
LG GE20NU10 External DVD
Microsoft Office 2010 Retail x64bit
Sony internal Blu-ray/DVD Rewriter
Integrated 2mp Skype certified Webcam
Creative T40 Speakers
Internet Explorer 9 x64 RC
DG834GT Router with DGTeam hacked Firmware
3 Mifi Wireless Dongle
hi guys,
after many months of being fine my computer has decied to do this error all over again. there seems to be no fix for it anywhere on the internet and im really lost as to what to do next. im still getting the exact same error with exactly the same details. Has anyone managed to find the solution to the problem?

I have found the minidump files this is the error i get:

The problem seems to be caused by the following file: dump_dumpfve.sys

Technical Information:


*** STOP: 0x00000117 (0xfffffa80041bd4e0, 0xfffff88004934e64, 0x0000000000000000,
0x0000000000000000)

*** dump_dumpfve.sys - Address 0xfffffa8005889620 base at 0xfffff88005d27000 DateStamp
0x4a5bc18f

thanks for any help that someone may give
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7
Kernel Power

Well change of plan folks - but now i can honestly say ive found the cause of my crashes - turns out it wasnt the sound driver but my Intel Wifi 5300 Driver (version 13.3.0.0)

Once uninstalled i reverted back to the system default (microsoft drivers) and now 2 weeks without 1 single crash - used Prime95 many times but still no issues with Kernel Power ID 41
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell XPS 15 (L501x)
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit with SP1
CPU
Intel i7-740QM (6mb cache, 1.73ghz - turboboost 2.93ghz, HT)
Motherboard
Intel HM57
Memory
4GB DDR3 1333mhz Dual Channel
Graphics Card(s)
nVidia GT 435M 2GB GDDR3
Sound Card
Realtek Audio with JBL Speakers, subwoofer & Waves Maxxaudio
Monitor(s) Displays
1920 x 1080 15.4" RGB LED (AUO17ED)
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080 WUGA Truelife Glossy
Hard Drives
120GB OCZ Vertex 2e SSD
500GB Seagate Momentus 7200.4 7200rpm 16mb cache HDD (external)
Cooling
GPU & CPU repasted with Arctic Cooling MX-2
Keyboard
UK Qwerty
Mouse
Synaptics Multi-Touch Touchpad
Internet Speed
ADSL - Download @14365kbs / Upload @ 1145kbs (ISP - Orange)
Other Info
Intel WiMax 6250 a/b/g/n/wimax Card with Intel Centrino vPro
Canon MP640 Printer
LG GE20NU10 External DVD
Microsoft Office 2010 Retail x64bit
Sony internal Blu-ray/DVD Rewriter
Integrated 2mp Skype certified Webcam
Creative T40 Speakers
Internet Explorer 9 x64 RC
DG834GT Router with DGTeam hacked Firmware
3 Mifi Wireless Dongle
Same problem

Hello, I too am having this problem. Changing the minimum processor state didn't work for me. Disabling Intel Speedstep did not appear to be an option in my BIOS (Intel desktop mobo). I tried a bios update and that too had no effect. I am hoping a better PSU will be the answer...
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Pro 32
Have you tried uninstalling your wifi drivers to the default microsoft ones??
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell XPS 15 (L501x)
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit with SP1
CPU
Intel i7-740QM (6mb cache, 1.73ghz - turboboost 2.93ghz, HT)
Motherboard
Intel HM57
Memory
4GB DDR3 1333mhz Dual Channel
Graphics Card(s)
nVidia GT 435M 2GB GDDR3
Sound Card
Realtek Audio with JBL Speakers, subwoofer & Waves Maxxaudio
Monitor(s) Displays
1920 x 1080 15.4" RGB LED (AUO17ED)
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080 WUGA Truelife Glossy
Hard Drives
120GB OCZ Vertex 2e SSD
500GB Seagate Momentus 7200.4 7200rpm 16mb cache HDD (external)
Cooling
GPU & CPU repasted with Arctic Cooling MX-2
Keyboard
UK Qwerty
Mouse
Synaptics Multi-Touch Touchpad
Internet Speed
ADSL - Download @14365kbs / Upload @ 1145kbs (ISP - Orange)
Other Info
Intel WiMax 6250 a/b/g/n/wimax Card with Intel Centrino vPro
Canon MP640 Printer
LG GE20NU10 External DVD
Microsoft Office 2010 Retail x64bit
Sony internal Blu-ray/DVD Rewriter
Integrated 2mp Skype certified Webcam
Creative T40 Speakers
Internet Explorer 9 x64 RC
DG834GT Router with DGTeam hacked Firmware
3 Mifi Wireless Dongle
i thought i solved the problem by reinstalling new sound drivers. didnt do it for around 2-3 weeks however it has just started up again with the same probelm im really at a lose as to do to do next :(
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7
I have been having a similar problem as a lot of people.
It first started a few days ago. I have had Windows 7 running on my system fine for at least 6 months (running a little slower than it should but I thought it was because i messed some stuff up) and then it randomly shut off while installing Adobe CS5. When I restarted it it got to the desktop, as it was connecting to my network it froze. I manually rebooted it. After that it would shut off anywhere from the time the Windows booting up screen showed up to less than a second after the desktop loaded with a BSOD.

I switched out my RAM and Video Card, reformatted my computer and had the same issue, reinstalled again and same exact issue.

I took apart my computer, reassembled it, zerod out my hard drive, ran diagnostics on my hard drive and memory with no errors. I installed Windows 7 again. While downloading updates it shut down. Now it shuts shown within a few seconds or half an hour of my computer starting.

My Power Supply is 1000 wats (don't ask why) so I don't believe it is insufficient power. I have NO IDEA what to do. Anybody have any ideas?!
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell XPS 710
OS
Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 @ 2.40GHz
Motherboard
Dell 0UY253
Memory
2X{Corsair DDR2 1GB, 2X{PDP Systems DDR2 1GB,
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce 9800 GTX+
Sound Card
Sound Blaster Audigy
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell SE198WFP
Screen Resolution
1440x900
Hard Drives
Seagate ST325082 (244 GB)
PSU
N1000P-00 1000-Watts
Case
Large
Cooling
4 fans: CPU, Video, Hard drive, PCI slot
Keyboard
Standard
Mouse
Standard
Internet Speed
15 Mb/S
Other Info
Chipset: NVIDIA nForce4 SLI Intel Edition
Southbridge: NVIDIA nForce 570 SLI
BIOS: Dell, version 1.4.1
Network Card: Linksys WMP54G V. 4.51 (running on Ralink Wireless LAN Card V2 drivers)
hey, i got a friend of mine who got this problem as well, and the culprit is the soldering of processor socket is a little bit loose.. so he went to his computer SC to fix it...

i dont know if my solution above works for you, but for my friend it did.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Quanta TW9
OS
7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel Core i7 720QM
Motherboard
Intel HM55
Memory
Kingston 2x2GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 665MHz (9-9-9-24)
Graphics Card(s)
nVidia GT 335M
Sound Card
Realtek HD Audio
Screen Resolution
1366x768
Hard Drives
WDC WD5000BEVT-22A0RT0 ATA Device
Keyboard
Microsoft Wired Desktop 600
Mouse
Microsoft Wired Desktop 600
Internet Speed
512 kbps +
I noticed that for me when I go to the System Rating thing and I have it rate my computer, it gets to "tuning windows media decoding" and more often than not my computer shuts off (a few times it completed and once everything completely froze). Does anybody else have this issue/know why?
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell XPS 710
OS
Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 @ 2.40GHz
Motherboard
Dell 0UY253
Memory
2X{Corsair DDR2 1GB, 2X{PDP Systems DDR2 1GB,
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce 9800 GTX+
Sound Card
Sound Blaster Audigy
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell SE198WFP
Screen Resolution
1440x900
Hard Drives
Seagate ST325082 (244 GB)
PSU
N1000P-00 1000-Watts
Case
Large
Cooling
4 fans: CPU, Video, Hard drive, PCI slot
Keyboard
Standard
Mouse
Standard
Internet Speed
15 Mb/S
Other Info
Chipset: NVIDIA nForce4 SLI Intel Edition
Southbridge: NVIDIA nForce 570 SLI
BIOS: Dell, version 1.4.1
Network Card: Linksys WMP54G V. 4.51 (running on Ralink Wireless LAN Card V2 drivers)
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