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8 answers

You need more ram most likly. lukily its one of the few things you can upgrade on a laptop. If you know what your doing you can set a usb storage device to act as added ram

2007-03-29 04:30:31 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

It would have helped if you listed a specific error message. It is possible you have bad memory but unlikely - that, at least, is easy to check. Odds are you have an incompatible program. Did it begin happening right after you loaded something or tried updating some software? If so, then that is probably the culprit. Try starting in safe mode (F8) and running for awhile (it will be much slower). If it works in safe mode then it is a software conflict. You can try using restore to go back to an earlier date when it was working but I would also think back to recent non-microsoft updates and delete the last couple to see if that helps. If you have an Nvidia card then the driver could also be causing that problem.

2007-03-29 04:28:49 · answer #2 · answered by smgray99 7 · 0 0

One question nobody has asked you is have you installed Vista on an old computer or is it a new one which came with Vista installed. If you installed it then other answers are correct, there are quite a few bugs to sort out yet and it's always best to wait till Microsoft have released a service pack before moving to a new system. However if it's a new computer it must still be under warranty. If so contact your supplier, it's their responsibility to get it sorted. Good luck.

2007-03-29 04:38:14 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

this may be countless issues in spite of if it is for specific you have become a hardware malfunction the place the device finally leads to a limiteless loop and domicile windows is shutting your device all the way down to circumvent any injury. A blue reveal screen or BSoD(blue reveal screen of dying) is maximum in many situations brought about via overheating or a fault at a RAM tackle. Like somebody else mentioned run memtest86 over nighttime and it will attempt your ram for faults. in case you could open the case and consider your followers to insure that they are all working wisely. If the pc is branded I many times would not undertaking approximately overheating. have you ever put in any new hardware recently? if so then do away with it as drivers or IRQ might reason this situation. in case you nevertheless cant verify the situation and are pc experienced I advise viewing the crashdump report which will inform you precisely what went incorrect.

2016-12-15 11:10:46 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Why people buy a new windows operating system the minute it is released is beyond me.

They are ALWAYS full of bugs and NEVER going to work with everything first time.

The best advice I can give you is to reinstall your old operating system (which will be compatible with everything) then WAIT A FEW MONTHS while microsoft sort out the 'issues' with Vista.....

2007-03-29 04:24:05 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

this is because of some newly installed hardware or software.But vista has a bug in which it has a problem of shutting down when it detects new hardware or when sometimes even with the currently installed hardware.

you really should not have gone for vista at this time.you should have waited for the first service pack to be released

2007-03-29 04:28:39 · answer #6 · answered by Aditya Kamath 2 · 1 0

the problem is your memory windows is trying to find some more but cannot so shuts down did you delete your old operating system or upgrade try doing a format and reinstall

2007-03-29 04:33:38 · answer #7 · answered by simonjohnlaw 5 · 0 0

Go to a command prompt and type


SFC /scannow

That could fix it.

2007-03-29 04:25:27 · answer #8 · answered by Kokopelli 6 · 0 0

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