Blue screen
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vampire49
-
May 14, 2010 at 06:38 AM
kristain Posts 69 Registration date Friday March 12, 2010 Status Member Last seen May 30, 2011 - Jun 2, 2010 at 02:28 AM
kristain Posts 69 Registration date Friday March 12, 2010 Status Member Last seen May 30, 2011 - Jun 2, 2010 at 02:28 AM
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24 responses
My usb size is 16 gb but how we can boot ? Have you founded a program from ubuntu which makes usb bootable device?
i found something that i believe that it is better : a hard disk of my father whose memory is bigger than the memory of the hard disk my pc has
djsmurf
Posts
98
Registration date
Friday January 9, 2009
Status
Member
Last seen
April 30, 2011
19
Jun 1, 2010 at 09:56 PM
Jun 1, 2010 at 09:56 PM
Hey Vampire,
Haven't contacted you in a while, im sorry about that duty called. Have you had any luck or are we still where we left off?
Haven't contacted you in a while, im sorry about that duty called. Have you had any luck or are we still where we left off?
kristain
Posts
69
Registration date
Friday March 12, 2010
Status
Member
Last seen
May 30, 2011
20
Jun 2, 2010 at 02:28 AM
Jun 2, 2010 at 02:28 AM
For non technical people who need a solution on how to fix the Blue Screen of Death, there is no simple answer to that.
The Windows operating system constantly refers to the registry to get information about all of the components such as hardware and software which are installed on the computer. The registry tells Windows what to do and how to access the various programs, files, and processes.
However, the registry can contain bad information which sends Windows off doing useless tasks or running unneeded routines. Sometimes errors occur including the blue screen of death. Other times the system slows down. Because of the sheer number of factors that can affect the registry, there's no one size fits all approach. You can't just go into the registry and remove the bad information because it's nearly impossible to decipher which information is good and which information is bad. That's a job better suited for software.
The Windows operating system constantly refers to the registry to get information about all of the components such as hardware and software which are installed on the computer. The registry tells Windows what to do and how to access the various programs, files, and processes.
However, the registry can contain bad information which sends Windows off doing useless tasks or running unneeded routines. Sometimes errors occur including the blue screen of death. Other times the system slows down. Because of the sheer number of factors that can affect the registry, there's no one size fits all approach. You can't just go into the registry and remove the bad information because it's nearly impossible to decipher which information is good and which information is bad. That's a job better suited for software.