Command Services Blue Screen

From RoyalWeb
Jump to: navigation, search
(Steps I followed)
Line 14: Line 14:
  
 
==Steps I followed==
 
==Steps I followed==
Microsoft's help site is not more specific that that, but does recommend a series of steps you follow.  Following these steps however gives conflicting results.  Although you *can* get to a point where continued reboots do not cause a blue screen, this point also appears to block you from signing onto AOL, probably because some required service is not loaded.  In addition, following the step, which you must, to "disable ALL services", removes all your old restore points.  So after doing this, which you will, and it will not solve the problem, you've now created a computer that can never again be rolled back before today.  Thank you so much Microsoft.  I would recommend there help page be changed to say, do NOT under any circumstances, disable ALL services, ever, period.
+
Microsoft's help site is not more specific that that, but does recommend a series of steps you follow.  Following these steps however gives conflicting results.  Although you *can* get to a point where continued reboots do not cause a blue screen, this point also appears to block you from signing onto AOL, probably because some required service is not loaded.  In addition, following the step, which you must, to "disable ALL services", removes all your old restore points.  So after doing this, which you will, and it will not solve the problem, you've now created a computer that can never again be rolled back before today.  Thank you so much Microsoft.  I would recommend their help page be changed to say, do NOT under any circumstances, disable ALL services, ever, period.
  
 
At any rate, after that rant, the instructions fail to allow the average user to properly determine how to fix the error.  Asking a user to start or stop dozens of services vaguely defined, until the system works for a day, is not really a *solution* at all.  That Microsoft would ask users to do this, is ridiculous.  In addition, one particular service, if you turn it off and reboot will WIPE OUT all your restore points.  It's a timebomb, they should change the page.  Okay I guess I wasn't done ranting.
 
At any rate, after that rant, the instructions fail to allow the average user to properly determine how to fix the error.  Asking a user to start or stop dozens of services vaguely defined, until the system works for a day, is not really a *solution* at all.  That Microsoft would ask users to do this, is ridiculous.  In addition, one particular service, if you turn it off and reboot will WIPE OUT all your restore points.  It's a timebomb, they should change the page.  Okay I guess I wasn't done ranting.

Revision as of 08:27, 1 October 2007

Personal tools
MOOCOW
Google AdSense