Re: Why do I frequently get BSODs if I log in too fast?
- From: Andrew Rossmann <andysnewsreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 2008 15:47:16 -0500
In article <bc2bdcc8-66fd-4d40-8db1-7a47a4e807b2
@s50g2000hsb.googlegroups.com>, void.no.spam.com@xxxxxxxxx says...
When I first installed Windows 2000 a few years ago, I noticed that if
I logged in within 15-20 seconds of the logon screen appearing, then I
frequently got a BSOD within a few seconds of logging in. But if I
waited more than 15-20 seconds after the logon screen appeared, then I
never got a BSOD.
For the last couple years, I have been very good at waiting more than
20 seconds to log in, and I have never seen a BSOD in that time.
But today I wasn't paying much attention, and I think I logged in
right after the logon screen appeared. Sure enough, I got a BSOD
within a few seconds. Here is what the Event Log says for today's
BSOD (I'm pretty sure previous BSODs were different from this one):
The computer has rebooted from a bugcheck. The bugcheck was:
0x0000001e (0xc0000005, 0x8046acc8, 0x00000000, 0x00000000). Microsoft
Windows 2000 [v15.2195]. A dump was saved in: C:\WINNT\Minidump
\Mini062608-01.dmp.
Any idea why logging in too fast frequently causes a BSOD?
Microsoft keeps trying to push the login screen earlier and earlier to
make Windows SEEM to be faster. I usually wait until the heavy disk
activity finishes before logging in.
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- Why do I frequently get BSODs if I log in too fast?
- From: void.no.spam.com@xxxxxxxxx
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