Blue Screen "Dumping Physical Memory To Disk"
Melinadu47
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maheux93 Posted messages 3 Status Membre -
maheux93 Posted messages 3 Status Membre -
Hello .. I have a SAMSUNG laptop ...
When I go on MSN and I want to change the font, I click on Change Font and a blue screen appears with: "Dumping Physical Memory To Disk " from 1 to 100 and then the computer restarts ...
And I tried to change the font through the control panel and the same thing happens, the computer crashes ...
Thanks to anyone who finds the solution ...
When I go on MSN and I want to change the font, I click on Change Font and a blue screen appears with: "Dumping Physical Memory To Disk " from 1 to 100 and then the computer restarts ...
And I tried to change the font through the control panel and the same thing happens, the computer crashes ...
Thanks to anyone who finds the solution ...
12 réponses
Hi
Which version of Windows is this for?
Windows 7 or Vista: Start menu, type cmd in the search box, then right-click on it to open cmd.exe as an administrator and type sfc /scannow; and yes, hit enter, then wait until it reaches 100%.
(Under XP, the difference is that you don't have a search box...)
Open the properties of the C: partition, then go to the Tools tab; then click the button to repair the disk and check both boxes (file test and surface test), confirm and no, do not force the unmounting, but yes, schedule the action on reboot.
Did you know you can disable automatic reboot to have time to read the blue screen of death (BSOD) (and to avoid looking silly in front of a computer that keeps rebooting on its own without knowing what to do that's not stupid = some (seen on ccm) remove the battery to turn off the computer, or force shutdown (4 seconds on the power button) at the wrong time, when the hard drive is being read or written primarily, the noise and/or a light indicates it)?
Press Windows key + pause (to open "System") and go to advanced options and uncheck the box for automatic reboot.
And in the same dialog box, set 30 seconds for the display of the normal Windows menu and for the Windows recovery menu; check both boxes.
(10 seconds would be a normal minimum (5 seconds for those in a hurry) for the normal menu, but always set at least 30 seconds for the recovery menu. 30 seconds for the normal menu is very good; it prevents you from jumping on the computer if you don't want it to start for various reasons or to see if the computer is functioning, screen, fan, ...; it also lets you know if Windows boots or not or if the computer is dead.)
When the Windows menu appears at PC boot (there should be at least two lines; you can duplicate a line (except for the GUID for Vista and 7)), you can press a key to stop the countdown to launch the default menu at the end of the countdown; then you can either choose an item in the menu or you can shut down the PC = it's a clean shutdown (1 press should be enough, no need to force shutdown by holding the power button for 4 seconds).
The 4 seconds press time can be adjustable in the BIOS...
Which version of Windows is this for?
Windows 7 or Vista: Start menu, type cmd in the search box, then right-click on it to open cmd.exe as an administrator and type sfc /scannow; and yes, hit enter, then wait until it reaches 100%.
(Under XP, the difference is that you don't have a search box...)
Open the properties of the C: partition, then go to the Tools tab; then click the button to repair the disk and check both boxes (file test and surface test), confirm and no, do not force the unmounting, but yes, schedule the action on reboot.
Did you know you can disable automatic reboot to have time to read the blue screen of death (BSOD) (and to avoid looking silly in front of a computer that keeps rebooting on its own without knowing what to do that's not stupid = some (seen on ccm) remove the battery to turn off the computer, or force shutdown (4 seconds on the power button) at the wrong time, when the hard drive is being read or written primarily, the noise and/or a light indicates it)?
Press Windows key + pause (to open "System") and go to advanced options and uncheck the box for automatic reboot.
And in the same dialog box, set 30 seconds for the display of the normal Windows menu and for the Windows recovery menu; check both boxes.
(10 seconds would be a normal minimum (5 seconds for those in a hurry) for the normal menu, but always set at least 30 seconds for the recovery menu. 30 seconds for the normal menu is very good; it prevents you from jumping on the computer if you don't want it to start for various reasons or to see if the computer is functioning, screen, fan, ...; it also lets you know if Windows boots or not or if the computer is dead.)
When the Windows menu appears at PC boot (there should be at least two lines; you can duplicate a line (except for the GUID for Vista and 7)), you can press a key to stop the countdown to launch the default menu at the end of the countdown; then you can either choose an item in the menu or you can shut down the PC = it's a clean shutdown (1 press should be enough, no need to force shutdown by holding the power button for 4 seconds).
The 4 seconds press time can be adjustable in the BIOS...