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#11
If you have no files you need to keep, do a clean install. If you have important files, do a reset.
If you have no files you need to keep, do a clean install. If you have important files, do a reset.
Just finished doing a clean install. Resets just havent seemed to work for me. I booted into a live Linux distro to backup all the data I wanted. I'm sure I'll be back on these forums....Thank you for your support!
I have the same problem on an Asus laptop. The problem appears to be the SSD. If I use a HDD 10 works fine. 10 not ready for primetime yet.
Butting in.
You marked this as solved because you turned off your page file?
I've found Windows 10 needs a little time to "settle".
Sort of like flashing a new Android rom. You need it to be completely updated, and restarted a few times before it really hits its stride.
If I were you, I'd ensure I'm all the way updated, that I have drivers from my manufacturer (rather than Windows update) and that I told update to stop replacing my manufacturer's drivers with generic ones.
I installed a Samsung 850 EVO last month, and running without a page file resulted in more blue screens than I've seen on my main rig in the last 2 years. Of course I hope your results differ, but running without the page file doesn't seem to work so well in 10.
You can turn off driver updates by following instructions here:
How to Uninstall and Block Updates and Drivers on Windows 10
Then you may want to look into this tool:
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/...source=twitter