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BSOD while watching YouTube, Rutube, etc?
Dear colleagues, please advise on the solution of the following issue:
I have a computer (reinstalling WinXP is undesirable, since it is problematic to find the installed software), AMD Athlon II X2 260, AMD 770, 2 GB DDR3, ATI Radeon HD 6570.
Problem: bosses like to watch videos on the Internet, but in any browser watching a video from YouTube (or Rutube) causes the computer to freeze, then reboot or (not always) crash into a BSOD. At the same time, the Vkontaktovsky player works successfully, similarly, any other video files (locally, up to HD) play with a bang. Updating the Flash player did not help, similarly updating the video card driver, and codecs, avast is also out of business - when it stops, the effect repeats. In general, I'm in a fog.
Thank you.
UPD: habra user beho1der suggested a solution that worked. Thank you)
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I met such a thing, the reason was that ATI drivers incorrectly worked out the GPU acceleration of the flash player (or maybe vice versa), try setting the flash version without GPU acceleration, maybe just 10 and test it!
Download
www.nirsoft.net/utils/blue_screen_view.html
Run, the program analyzes memory dumps and displays the cause (driver) that caused the BSOD.
something with iron (vidyaha is not heated? monitor the temperature)
After reading, I have 2 ideas that I would check myself.
Memory:
1. RAM - memtest
2. on the GPU - graphics memory also goes away. Play some Crysis2 at the boss's office.
3. What I would check after is the processor. Make a heavy load on the processor (superpi?).
Wait for BSOD.
PS: The last time I had a BSOD jumped out due to the fact that one of my disks flew out of the RAID field ... You can also check it ;-)
For starters, I would advise some kind of LiveCD and test it there. If everything is OK, then the problem is software, if not, then in the hardware.
Most likely, the processor cooling is to blame. Try replacing possibly baked thermal paste between the heatsink and the processor itself.
I had a similar error.
Replacing the power supply helped.
Also, such unauthorized overloads can be associated with DDR3 overheating.
In BIOS, you need to make the voltage not auto, but 1.5V or lower. Some mothers on cars simply overestimate the voltage to 1.6, and this is very critical for DDR3 dice.
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