Computer becomes blue screen and automatic off

G

Guest

Guest
sir
1- my system becomes blue screen & direct off automatically after 1 minute restart again.
2- when i play games it automatically direct off after 1 minute restart again.
3- when system became slow it become off automatically.

please help me about it. my id is manoj100panda@rediffmail.com
 

ashutoshgupta

Distinguished
Dec 4, 2011
66
0
18,640
sir
1- my system becomes blue screen & direct off automatically after 1 minute restart again.
2- when i play games it automatically direct off after 1 minute restart again.
3- when system became slow it become off automatically.

please help me about it. my id is manoj100panda@rediffmail.com


Hi;
there is some problem in your game which does not support your comuter hardware properly....
also scan for viruses
 

alishathomaz

Honorable
Mar 6, 2012
128
0
10,710
The most important Blue Screen of Death troubleshooting step you can take is to ask yourself what you just did.

1) Did you just install a new program or a piece of hardware, update a driver, install an update, etc.? If so,
there's a very good chance that the change you made caused the BSOD:

Startup using Last Known Good Configuration to undo recent registry and driver changes.
Use System Restore to undo recent system changes.
Roll Back device driver to version prior to your driver update.

2) Scan your computer for viruses. Some viruses can cause a Blue Screen of Death, especially ones that infect the master boot record (MBR) or boot sector.

3) Update drivers for your hardware. Most Blue Screens of Death are hardware or driver related so updated drivers could fix the cause of the STOP error.

4) Return hardware settings to default in Device Manager. Unless you have a specific reason to do so, the system resources that an individual piece of hardware is configured to use in Device Manager should be set to default.

Non-default hardware settings have been known to cause a Blue Screen of Death.

5) Return BIOS settings to their default levels. An overclocked or misconfigured BIOS can cause all sorts of random issues, including BSODs.


Perform the following tasks::


Remove unused programs
Install and run antispyware software
Free up wasted space with Disk Cleanup tool
Defragment your hard disk drive
Disconnect unused network connections:
Click Start, and then click My Computer.

On the Tools menu, click Disconnect Network Drive.

Select the network drives that you no longer need, and then click OK.




Click Start - Run, type in %temp% and then click OK.

Once that temp folder is open and you can view its contents, select and delete EVERYTHING that's inside it.

It's all junk and is a good place for "nasties" to hide.

If a few files resist being deleted, that's normal. Leave them alone and delete EVERYTHING else.

Repeat the steps with c:\windows\temp

After you're done with both temp folders, restart the computer.