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| Thread ID: 28029 | 2002-12-09 07:26:00 | Core Voltages | Scotty D (491) | Press F1 |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 104437 | 2002-12-11 08:11:00 | Unless this happens repeatedly every time you try installing updates from Windows Update, it could just be a once off event. Sometimes a page doesn't load quite properly, and you end up with script source pointing to variables that don't exist and the likes. Try going to Windows Update first thing after booting your PC, then see if it works. |
agent (30) | ||
| 104438 | 2002-12-11 08:32:00 | I would also never worry about core voltage levels, unless they are more than 10% out. I have a monitoring program, and levels that are supposed to be 2.5V are 2.34V and things like that. Unless you want to buy a very very good quality PSU, and have a power surge protector board, and a regulator that makes sure the supplied voltage is what it needs to be, you'll most likely never get the exact voltage. | agent (30) | ||
| 104439 | 2002-12-11 08:38:00 | Its not that you are never actually getting the right volts, consider that your motherboard costs less than a mediocre multimeter that measures the voltage only slightly more accurately. Its a motherboard that also *roughly* reports volts. Its not an accurate voltmeter that also acts as a computer. If you are really worried, buy a good Fluke multimeter, pay extra to have it calibrated, then measure the volts. Allow $600 to do this. By the way, the temperatures reported are also *approximate* |
godfather (25) | ||
| 104440 | 2002-12-11 09:05:00 | I believe I know exactly what this is. You have a faulty RAM stick. Search Google "Corrupt C:\Windows\System32\system" or "Corrupt or missing C:\Windows\System32\Config" Get a RAM tester from the Internet and check the RAM. I hope this helps. |
Elephant (599) | ||
| 104441 | 2002-12-11 09:49:00 | Yes, it definately sounds like the RAM; but that script error message keeps coming up, something like... about ten description lines, about scripting errors and one in particular which points to the ...www...??..update.eula.htm and the 'accept' (shaded out - this pops up directly after error reported) and the 'don't accept' (not shaded)? So any ideas, I had to install XP at least 5 times in less days would the number have been stopped?? ?? |
Scotty D (491) | ||
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