Re: Turn on memory checking in bios
- From: "Ken Blake, MVP" <kblake@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 24 Dec 2007 13:02:38 -0700
On Mon, 24 Dec 2007 12:29:45 -0700, "V Green" <vanceg@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Oh, so you figure that since you were the last one
to post and that my reply was next that it was intended for you?
My apologies oh god of whatever it is you think you're god of.
Most people would not think so highly of themselves that they
would make this assumption.
It has nothing to do with thinking I'm God of anything, or thinking
highly of myself. It's matter of simple netiquette, and it's a matter
of not writing confusing messages. One doesn't just respond to the
thread, one responds specifically to a particular message, and in this
case you responded to a particular message *I* wrote. If you want to
reply to a message, please be sure to reply to the correct one. If
someone asks a question you want to answer, or says something you want
to comment on, then it's *his* message you should reply to. Do not
simply reply to any old message in the thread.
For example, if someone asks a question, and six people reply to him,
each with a different opinion, and you want to tell one of those six
people he's wrong, and explain why, surely you can realize the
importance of replying to the correct message.
"Ken Blake, MVP" <kblake@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:7310n3ts0266qbk20205haj9qm30i30t18@xxxxxxxxxx
On Mon, 24 Dec 2007 10:57:02 -0700, "V Green" <vanceg@xxxxxxxxxxx>still my
wrote:
Check Event View>>System and see if there's an entry
just before the freeze. Or if there's anything else relevant
there.
See the XP Helpfile.
No thank you. I'm not the one with the problem. Please respond to the
appropriate message in the thread.
"Ken Blake, MVP" <kblake@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:ivrvm3pr4tfop47drhb1fl90c8jsflmsmn@xxxxxxxxxx
On Mon, 24 Dec 2007 04:48:01 -0800, Chuck25computer
<Chuck25@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Thanks for everyone who responded to my post. My main problem is my
diskfreezes after start up. I've looked at my fans and their okay. I've done
clean up and defrag. My motherboard along with RAM and intel pentium 4
processor is a couple of months old. I even reloaded windows xp and
computer freezes. Anyone have any suggestions what could cause computer
freezes?
I can't tell you what's wrong, although if the same problem occurs
after reinstalling Windows cleanly, I would strongly suspect a
hardware issue--most likely either flaky power (either from the power
supply or wall outlet) or RAM.
By the way, being a couple of months old does *not* rule out hardware
problems. In fact the two times hardware is *most* likely to fail is
when it's new and when it's old.
When does it freeze? If it freezes right after startup, how did you do
a disk cleanup and defrag?
--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User
Please Reply to the Newsgroup
--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User
Please Reply to the Newsgroup
--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User
Please Reply to the Newsgroup
.
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- Re: Turn on memory checking in bios
- From: Ken Blake, MVP
- Re: Turn on memory checking in bios
- From: V Green
- Re: Turn on memory checking in bios
- From: Ken Blake, MVP
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- From: V Green
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