The times i've had that BSOD was because i had a bad configuration of the RAM in BIOS, and/or faulty GPU drivers. You could try uninstalling the current GPU drivers (if you have an Nvidia or AMD GPU) and reinstalling new that support windows 10.
The times i've had that BSOD was because i had a bad configuration of the RAM in BIOS, and/or faulty GPU drivers. You could try uninstalling the current GPU drivers (if you have an Nvidia or AMD GPU) and reinstalling new that support windows 10.
How old is the harddrive? 4-5 years is the average life of a harddrive.
Was this an upgrade install? If so do a Fresh install.
Yeah, its like 4-5 years, but I made a fresh install, then microsoft updater set up new drivers for everything :/
(Trying GPU driver reinstall and harddriver reinstall[old one])
The times i've had that BSOD was because i had a bad configuration of the RAM in BIOS, and/or faulty GPU drivers. You could try uninstalling the current GPU drivers (if you have an Nvidia or AMD GPU) and reinstalling new that support windows 10.
The times i've had that BSOD was because i had a bad configuration of the RAM in BIOS, and/or faulty GPU drivers. You could try uninstalling the current GPU drivers (if you have an Nvidia or AMD GPU) and reinstalling new that support windows 10.
Where can I find right RAM configs?
The memory (RAM) configurations are in the BIOS. The clock speeds and voltages, timings are set on default by JDEC specs, but most RAM kits are made to run at higher specs that can be manually set (risky) or using a XMP profile that will automatically tweak the RAM to the meant-to-be-used speed.