Re: Have anyone used GeekSquad- little help
A faulty memory will give you random crashes and BSOD in windows, usually with a long string of cryptic numbers. Same with overclocking a CPU. Not so much a faulty video card. Faulty video cards either boot up and you see shit, or doesn't boot up.
If you are getting your RAM replaced soon, I would hold off till you get the new RAM, plug it in, and see how your computer runs for a day. If in the event the faulty RAM has fuxored your Windows to the point of corruption, you can repair your installation (assuming you are using Windows 2000 or Win XP).
Just sitck your Windows install CD into the cdrom drive, boot up with it. In the setup menu, there is an option for REPAIR. Do that, and see how your computer runs after. You might have to reinstall drivers for your sound card, video card, whatever hardware you have. You might have to reinstall your games or some software (though I wouldn't think so, unless some data files or saved games were corrupted during your random crashes).
A faulty memory will give you random crashes and BSOD in windows, usually with a long string of cryptic numbers. Same with overclocking a CPU. Not so much a faulty video card. Faulty video cards either boot up and you see shit, or doesn't boot up.
If you are getting your RAM replaced soon, I would hold off till you get the new RAM, plug it in, and see how your computer runs for a day. If in the event the faulty RAM has fuxored your Windows to the point of corruption, you can repair your installation (assuming you are using Windows 2000 or Win XP).
Just sitck your Windows install CD into the cdrom drive, boot up with it. In the setup menu, there is an option for REPAIR. Do that, and see how your computer runs after. You might have to reinstall drivers for your sound card, video card, whatever hardware you have. You might have to reinstall your games or some software (though I wouldn't think so, unless some data files or saved games were corrupted during your random crashes).
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