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VS2012 Unstable
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À
25/11/2012 16:52:33
Information générale
Forum:
ASP.NET
Catégorie:
Visual Studio
Titre:
Divers
Thread ID:
01557954
Message ID:
01558011
Vues:
50
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>If the computer is new, make sure all drivers are up-to-date and exactly correct for the actual hardware. Look for hardware-related optional updates in Windows Update.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>I will try to take a picture with a camera when I get this BSOD. It usually scrolls fast but maybe Pause button will work.
>>>>>>The computer is not new - about 3-4 years old. And I only see this BSOD after I installed VS2012.
>>>>>>I have 4 GB of RAM. If I knew that adding another 2 or 4 GB would help to alleviate the problem I would certainly do it.
>>>>>>And I will check the System and Application event logs, to see if I find anything there.
>>>>>>Thank you.
>>>>>
>>>>>I highly recommend downloading the MemTest86+ ISO, burn a bootable CD from it, and run it to test your memory: http://www.memtest.org/
>>>>
>>>>I see many downloads on this page. Could you please explain the difference between the following two?
>>>>Download - Pre-compiled Bootable ISO (zip)
>>>>and
>>>>Download - Pre-compiled Bootable Binary (zip)
>>>
>>>You want the top one - the ISO. It is supplied in a zip archive. When you unzip it, you will have a single file with a .iso extension. You can then burn that ISO CD image directly to a blank CD - you can do that directly with Win7. You can then boot from the CD to run the utility. To do that, you have to make sure your machine can boot from CD, or access the boot menu with the appropriate keystroke sequence during boot.
>>
>>First, thank you! How do you check if the PC can boot from a CD?
>
>Many will by default - just put in the CD, restart, and see if you get an option to boot from the CD.
>
>If not, there are 2 possibilities:
>
>1. Many computers, especially laptops, have a special key you can press during boot to bring up a "boot menu". From that you can choose to boot from the optical drive. If you don't know which key that is, Google your computer make/model + "boot menu".
>
>2. If you can't get that to work, you can go into the BIOS setup. That is usually accessed with a different key during boot ( and before Windows starts ). In that, there will be a section named "boot device sequence" or something similar. Arrange the list so the optical drive is before the hard drive.

The memory test ran and showed no errors; all passed. Pretty neat tool. Thank you very much.
"The creative process is nothing but a series of crises." Isaac Bashevis Singer
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