upgrading the memory probably won't fix that. You should reformat your computer. That should get rid of it along with any viruses that you may have.
2007-03-24 17:09:28
·
answer #1
·
answered by T-man 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
NOTHING stops the Blue Screen of death.........it is a Microsoft Frankenstein, born out of the twisted minds of the evil scientists laboring feverishly in the depths of a large soulless building in Redmond, Washington.
The idea behind the development of the BSOD is that, once the public ( that's you & I ) become accustomed to seeing it appear spontaneously and frequently...... we are then the helpless, hypnotized victims who cannot help but read the words on the BSOD. That's when the REAL plan kicks in......
Microsoft intends to SELL ADVERTISING on the BSOD in the near future.
The potential revenue will equal that of the Super Bowl. Think of it....millions upon millions of PC users will be reading the advertising on the BSOD , around the world, around the clock.
About 2 years ago, Steve Ballmer was reported to have said this......
" The BSOD is Microsoft's ultimate advantage to SUN Solaris and Apple OSX, once we introduce advertising rights to it. Why the competition doesn't even have a BSOD, much less the ability to customize it! "
So, live with the BSOD......Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer need you to get used to it as quickly as possible.....
2007-03-24 17:17:43
·
answer #2
·
answered by InspectorBudget 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
I don't know what WoW is, but here is some information on the Blue Screen of Death.
Blue Screen of Death
The Blue Screen of Death (sometimes called "bluescreen", "stop error" or just abbreviated as "BSOD") is the popular name for the screen displayed by Microsoft's Windows operating system when it cannot recover from, or is in danger of being unable to recover from, a system error (the Microsoft term is Stop error). There are two Windows error screens that are both referred to as the blue screen of death, with one (Windows NT 4/2000/XP/Vista) being significantly more serious than the other (Windows 9x). There are several causes of the blue screen popping up. It can be a poorly-written device driver, bad memory, damaged registry or usage of incompatible versions of DLLs (see more on the "Types of blue screens" section).
The blue screen of death in one form or another has been present in all Windows operating systems since Windows version 3.1. It is the successor of the less well-known black screen of death that occurs in OS/2 as well as MS-DOS[1]. In early builds of Windows Vista it was complemented with a red screen of death, used for boot loader errors.
Blue Screen of Death – Link to fixes
http://search.yahoo.com/search?ei=utf-8&fr=slv8-fp&p=fix%20blue%20screen%20of%20death
2007-03-24 17:20:40
·
answer #3
·
answered by TheHumbleOne 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
It depends on your current specs really.. It could be memory, your CPU speed, or even your graphics card. I know when I play Oblivion that it CTD's on me and it's got to do with my processor speed and my memory being below the better requirements.
2007-03-24 17:15:16
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anuolf 3
·
0⤊
0⤋