Topic awaiting preservation: Random BSOD when Gaming (Page 1 of 1) |
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Maniac (V) Mad Scientist From: Rochester, New York, USA |
posted 02-14-2005 17:05
I have been having a problem with gaming on my computer lately, and I am wondering if anyone else has some experience or might give me some information that I need to trouble shoot the situation. |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Minnesota |
posted 02-14-2005 17:24
The rebooting is most likely due to your recovery settings. WinXP's default is to reboot after system failure. You can change this setting under the Advanced tab of System Properties (right click on my computer). |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: The Land of one Headlight on. |
posted 02-14-2005 17:43
I've been using this utility... which has waaay more features than I'll ever use... maybe something to look at.... and of course when it comes to gaming 'blackviper.com' shows you how to really tweak things out... quote: |
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist From: Rochester, New York, USA |
posted 02-14-2005 17:57
Stopping the restart will be great! I can at least see the failure information. I will do that and maybe come back with some concrete error messages. |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: Manitoba, Canada |
posted 02-14-2005 19:45
In Winxp/2k you can right click on My Computer and select Manage. Then go to the Event Viewer and see the system logs. This will often have the contents of error messages in it. |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: Cell 666 |
posted 02-14-2005 20:15 |
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist From: 100101010011 <-- right about here |
posted 02-14-2005 20:27
Back about 7-8 years ago I used to do vido game tech support. |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Minnesota |
posted 02-14-2005 21:39
I used to have a lot of crashing problems playing EQ when my Sound Card and Network card shared the same IRQ. Moving the sound card to its own IRQ solved that problem. |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: out of nowhere... |
posted 02-16-2005 21:04
*scans the thread* |
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist From: Rochester, New York, USA |
posted 02-16-2005 21:33
How do you move a device to a different IRQ? Both my AGP and PCI share the same IRQ. I am thinking this might be a bigish issue. |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: out of nowhere... |
posted 02-16-2005 23:09
I would remove the PCI card for a couple of days and see if I had any more crashes. You can try shifting the PCI card to a different slot so that it is reassigned an IRQ, but XP generally handles IRQ assignments rather effectively - shared IRQs are not necessarily conflicting (unless a device conflict is shown under the device manager, of course). |
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist From: Rochester, New York, USA |
posted 02-20-2005 16:10
Well I have now put about 10 hours into WoW and have not had a single crash. |