See if you can do a system restore to prior to when you did the update, like say yesterday.I can't seem to find the "exact" drivers that need rolling back.
I'm about at my wits end here....
Prime95 is a program that was originally meant to search for prime numbers. It's very very CPU and RAM intensive, and so the stress test became a good way to find out if a system is stable. It will peg your CPU at 100% usage and use lots of RAM while doing that. If something is wrong with your motherboard, cpu or RAM, errors will show up in the stress testing (which calculates known primes). Let it run the torture test overnight (8 threads, probably, to max out your quad-core chip with hyperthreading) and if doesn't return any errors you'll know the problem is with video or sound, and not with your processor or RAM.Figment I got the Prime95 64bit, ran it, and have no idea what I'm suposed to be looking at.
I'd bet you any money that wouldn't solve her problem.uninstall W7, install XP, problem solved
uninstall W7, install XP, problem solved
So get this:
I reformat the HD, I install windows7 fresh, grab WoW out of my windows.old folder, run WoW......
BSOD
yeah, i know, i'm new at this shit
And failing. You really should try to develop your own thing. Being a simple ass, while it is clearly a trait you are born with and cursed to have for the rest of your existance, is not enough. Try to broaden your horizons, and develop something of your own. Though that may be impossible (A hanging suicide in a closet while naked would be the best suggestion), you should still try.yeah, i know, i'm new at this shit
That is not true of WoW. You can copy WoW over to any folder, or external drive and it will run perfectly fine. I've always just moved over my WoW folder any time I've done an OS upgrade (I do clean installs). BTW, she has already done the steps listed above and it didn't do anything, she is still getting the BSOD.Second vote for reinstallation of WoW (or any other program, for that matter). The windows.old folder is there so that you can pull out your old data (pictures, saved games, addresses, etc). Trying to restore applications/utilities from within it (especially such complex ones as WoW) is usually doomed to failure due to having to also find all the .dll and other dependent files and restore them to their proper locations, too.
This is the main reason why most people don't attempt to repair/upgrade a Windows installation, they just back up the important files and reformat, then reinstall everything from original discs/downloads. Usually, it's less of a hassle, even if it does take an entire weekend.
--Patrick
That's why i only got 2 gb when i got the new PC... RAM is cheap, i figured i could always buy more later.Because I have 6gb of RAM that I was using on a 32bit OS.