Frequent computer hangs in XP? STOP to take its place in Vista., A new blue screen for an old problem
http://www.aeroxp.org/board/index.php?showtopic=5647
We've all had to deal with it. You know your computer has an inexplicable issue when it hangs mid-air while doing some important or resource-consuming task. It has been a problem for as long as anyone could remember, but nothing was really done to help the user or even the geeky computer technician pinpoint the exact problem behind that mysterious random STOP error or hid-air hang. Expect that to change. In the pre-RC1 and RC1 builds of Windows Vista, people have noticed something new. Machines which would often never STOP when running Vista would all of a sudden shut down with a mysterious error code 0x1A. Already there has been a fiasco over why build 5600 was certified as RC1 when this particular error would constantly rear its ugly head. The error is triggered by a new bugcheck which was added into the RC1 branch and merged into the RTM line of builds. When Windows normally requests a zeroed page of memory, the memory manager tells your machine to completely zero out a page of memory before allocating the zeroed memory to the thread requesting it. In all OSes prior to Vista 5536, this process would go unchecked. However, a recently added check to 5536 involves actually checking whether or not the pages which were to be zeroed actually were zeroed out. Should the check find memory pages which were supposed to be zeroed out but in fact were not, it would trigger your 0x1A STOP error or any other error dealing with memory corruption. By RTM, it will have its own error code (TBA) and name: PAGE_NOT_ZEROED. The problems which cause this error are almost always hardware related. It will most likely be one of three things: poorly seated DIMMs, bad RAM, or bad memory management on your motherboard(Intel) or processor(AMD). It could arise from bad drivers, though the odds of that are unlikely. Should you see the error, follow the usual hardware reseating guidelines such as checking for dust or burned contact points. Even your power supply could be the source of the issue. Good, well-seated hardware makes for less hangs, and in the future, less blue screens in Vista. |
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