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I ran it, rebooted, and then ran it again. Both times it said "Windows Resource Protection did not find any integrity violation"
I've uploaded the log files anyway, in case they are of any use.
Attachment 62684
It says "Primitive installers committed for repair" a lot, I'm not sure what that means in this context.
I've disabled the on board sound card, and the HDMI sound capabilities in my graphics card in software, just to see if it makes a difference.
Driver updates, but with a legacy one you can expect no updates.What should I look for if it is a driver conflict?
I'm not certain either what that meansIt says "Primitive installers committed for repair" a lot, I'm not sure what that means in this context.
Let me know how it goes :)
I've disabled the on board sound card and graphics card in the bios to see if it makes a difference, and I've also disabled the HDMI sound output on my graphics card for the same reason. I've had to do the latter in software as there is no bios option for that.
At least I can rule out Avira, as it went BSOD even when it wasn't installed.
I've updated all of the motherboard software from the manufacturers website. Even the bits that seem unlikely to be the cause of this.
I've heard a few people saying that they had problems with Windows 10 because of some kind of fast booting system. Where Windows saves an image when it shuts down and then loads it again when it boots. Rather than booting in the old fashioned way. Like some kind of smart hibernate function. It only happens on Boot, rather than reboot. Which fits with the problem that I'm having. Through the people reported it happening much more frequently than my problem.
One person said that they had to make their SSD hot swappable to stop it form going BSOD, another said that they needed to install some kind of firmware update. Both said that the image was being corrupted by their SSD, which was why it went BSOD on them.
I only have anecdotal evidence rather than anything firm.
Does this sound likely?
That would be fast startupI've heard a few people saying that they had problems with Windows 10 because of some kind of fast booting system. Where Windows saves an image when it shuts down and then loads it again when it boots. Rather than booting in the old fashioned way. Like some kind of smart hibernate function. It only happens on Boot, rather than reboot. Which fits with the problem that I'm having. Through the people reported it happening much more frequently than my problem.
Fast Startup - Turn On or Off in Windows 10 - Windows 10 Forums
The question would be if yours supports hot swappingOne person said that they had to make their SSD hot swappable to stop it form going BSOD
That is sometimes suggested yes. Firmware is what I call 'drivers', it is a program that tells the SSD how to function.another said that they needed to install some kind of firmware update.
If there are any updates available for your SSD, try to update it
Hi
I have this SSD
Sandisk 240GB SSD Plus SATA 6GB/s 2.5 Solid State Drive (SDSSDA-240G-G25) - dabs.com
The SanDisk dashbaord says that I'm on the latest firmware.
It looks like Fast startup is already turned off. I disabled both hibernate and sleep when I first went over to Windows 10. I did the same with Windows 7.
do you think that enabling Hot Swap will help, or is this a red herring?
I can't say, I don't have any experience with it and never suggested it as it wasn't ever necessary.do you think that enabling Hot Swap will help, or is this a red herring?
If you would like to know more about it I can ask someone to step by for this.