Hi.
I have recently upgraded my PC. The upgrade included:
- A 2GB DDR2 Kingmax RAM stick.
- A 250GB SATA II Hitachi hard drive, which is a replacement for my old broken hard drive.
- An NVIDIA GeForce 210.
I performed a clean install of Windows 7 after the hardware upgrade. After that, I upgraded to Windows 10. Since then, I have been encountering BSODs on a daily basis, even during normal computer use.
I think that the BSODs were caused by the new parts, and most likely caused by the new RAM stick, since I have not encountered this many BSODs before the hardware upgrade, when I was still using windows XP. Please help me find out the cause for the frequent BSODs.
I attached the debug file following the posting instructions. Thank you.
Hi lunateepsilon,
Welcome to the 10blog.
I see you have KMSpico, for what is this used?
I apologize for the late reply. I started this thread, but completely forgot about it.
KMSpico was used to circumvent Microsoft Office registration check, and none other than that. My copy of windows is genuine, since I acquired the activation key from Dreamspark.
Please uninstall Office and remove KMSpico, this to rule out compatibility problems from cracked programs.
Thank you for your reply. Should I re-run the analyzer script and upload the result as well, after uninstalling Office?
Only if you get another bluescreen.
It would not be necessary if you don't get another bluescreen.
Hi again. The problem persists after I have uninstalled Office and KMSpico. I also get BSODs whenever I wake my computer from sleep state.
Here is the collected data, again.
Please remove Avast using the uninstall instructionsMemory problemsCode:*** WARNING: Unable to verify timestamp for aswSP.sys *** ERROR: Module load completed but symbols could not be loaded for aswSP.sysCode:Probably caused by : memory_corruptionDiagnostic TestRAM TEST
Run MemTest86+to analyse your RAM. MemTest86+ - Test RAM - Windows 10 blogNote
MemTest86+ needs to be run for at least 8 passesfor conclusive results. Set it running before you go to bed and leave it overnight. We're looking for zeroerrors here. Even a single error will indicate RAM failure.