Blue screen of death - NVIDA

Anyone have any experiences with such an issue?

Vista tells me - This problem was caused by NVIDIA nForce™ SATA Driver, which was created by NVIDIA Corporation

Cheers


Comments
70
Have had some random bluescreens like ~6 years ago.

Format and get rid of that vista.
well it happened to me as well in the past. when my old hjdd was about to die, got those bsods for couple of weeks, then it died :< you may want to check ur PSU, because it also happened to me back in days.
Update driver, helped whit me
Tried, it stated I have the latest updated driver.
Parent
then downgrade driver until they release new version
Parent
i had the same when my PC was just new (same error i believe and windows vista too).
It eventually stopped happening cant recall how i fixed it exactly tho, but i think it might have been through extensive updating (of everything) mainly BIOS update!

GL!
wish i could help you :(
nice song!
and btw; take care of my brother will ya!
Is he actually coming?
Parent
In a few weeks (2/3) he'll be arriving in Dublin.
Parent
Haha, thats crazy. Ill probably meet him for a few beers.
Parent
If by few you mean at least 20 or 30, you got a date.
Parent
Hey Rhand, since when are you terrorizing crossfire again?
Parent
When have I left? I sometimes have some inactivity spells here, but at the moment I'm unemployed (I'm moving to Ireland in 2 weeks for work) so I have some time to spend on crossfire.

I hope you don't mind?
Parent
Quite a distance to your new job :-)
i don't mind!
Parent
we do srry ;p <3
Parent
wille gij is zwijge of ik zal eerst is nen detour naar de westhoek make ze.
Parent
doen zou ik zeggen ;p
Parent
So you actually got the job full time? In that CPL?
Parent
Yes sir!

23 november my plane leaves, CPL pays the flight ticket and 5 days in a B&B somewhere in Dublin. 28th I start working.

So I got 5 days to find a place, buy a cheap bike, open a bank account, get a PPS-number. Gonna be fun!
Parent
Nice one. Whats the money like? Is it a contract?
Parent
20,5k / annum
quarterly bonusses
extra's like gym & stuff
Parent
Nice, where is CPL based?
Parent
Well, CPL is based in Dublin 2 but they're outsourcing me to HP which is located in Leixlip.

I'm gonna try and find a place in Cabra, Drumcondra or Stoneybatter. Them ok places to live? I don't really wanna live in a bad neighbourhood.
Parent
For a start, cabra is miles away from leixlip. If your going to be in leixlip permamently, your better of moving there. Much cheaper than dublin city as it is considered Kildare. My best mate lives out there, great area.

Cabra, stoneybatter and Drumcondra are pretty much shit holes
Parent
I don't wanna live in a little town where there's nothing to do. I've used google maps and the 3 neighbourhoods I mentioned are all roughly 15-20 km away from Leixlip. I have no problem bicycling that distance every day (I've done it before for over a year).

I'm going to Ireland, so I wanna live in Dublin! A guy I know has a friend who works for HP as well and lives in Leixlip and he said the only thing they do outside work is sit in the pub all day. If I wanna do that, I can just get a job here in Belgium. No, I wanna get to know Dublin and Ireland.

So, those neighbourhoods any good to live in?

Edit: haha, shitholes. Okay, then I'll have to find some better neighbourhood to stay in I suppose. What about Crumlin & area?
Parent
Haha, crumlin is worse, horses in Halloween bonfires worse. Leixlip is such a great town, there is loads to do. Your better of looking for an apart directly in the city centre rather than surrounding areas. How much rent are you planning to pay?
Parent
350 excl utilities.
Parent
Per week or month?
Parent
month obviously. I'm looking to rent a room, not a house or a large apart.
Parent
Stoneybatter would be the best of those 3 places, drumcondra being the worst. My dad works in cabra, I suppose like anywhere it has its bad areas and good areas
Parent
Aight.

I just signed up to boards.ie, hopefully they can give me some useful advice as well. Don't wanna trouble you with all my questions.
Parent
Its cool, Im in work, so happy to help. Boards.ie will be helpful.
Parent
Haha, lot of contradictionary responses:

- one says Crumlin is a nice place, somebody denies this and calls it a crappy place to live.
- someone says Ballyfermot is a good place but then someone says she lived there for 6 years and never felt safe.

And then another person says almost all the neighbourhoods I mentioned (Cabra, Drumcondra, Stoneybatter, Smithfield, Rialto, Crumlin & Islandbridge) are pretty unsafe.

Dublin sounds so dangerous and violent :D
Parent
Well, one thing I can assure you, Ballyfermot, is an absolute shit-hole. I lived there since I was 5, horses in the garden everything. This is ballyfermot on an everyday basis. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G-4eB8fXHlY

I still live close to there, but wouldnt walk through the majority of parts of it ever.

I should have said until I was 5
Parent
What's "horses in the garden" supposed to mean, you've used it twice now but I have absolutely no idea how to interpret it.
Parent
I can understand why. In Ireland, urban cowboys are pretty popular. By this I mean scumbags going around causing mayhem on horse back. Its like they use it for a cover for all the other criminal activity they are involved in. If there are youths on horse back in an area in Dublin it is usually a good indication that the area is a shit hole.
Parent
Haha, okay!
Parent
Stoneybatter, Smithfield, are your best options. Allot better than they used to be.
Parent
How about a place where I can buy a decent 2nd hand bike (100-200 €)?

Edit: and have u any idea in what area Bilgrim lives?
Parent
adverts.ie and no, I dont
Parent
20,5k is toch echt wel niet veel hoor. Normaal gezien liggen de lonen in Ierland een serieus stuk boven die in Belgie. Jij zit zwaar onder het gemiddelde in Belgie, laat staan ierland, voor een op het eerste zicht toch ook niet echt aantrekkelijke functie. 20,5k is echt wel zeer weinig (zelfs in be krijg je bij slechte jobs al zoveel, is maar juist boven minimumloon van jou). Vergeet ook niet dat de kosten een stuk hoger liggen in Ierland dan hier. Als ge iets voor 300 euro wil huren gaat ge serieus mogen zoeken ze lol.

De economische situatie in Ierland is ook verre van goe. Jonge Ieren verlaten het land omdat er geen goeie jobs meer zijn (ik denk dat je een schijtjob vast hebt :/). Diegene die blijven moeten meer belastingen betalen door de financiele crisis in Ierland dus voor het geld moet ge ook al niet gaan. Vergeet niet dat de werklooshedisgraad in Ierland 14% is, de jobs die er zijn, zijn echt van het slechtste die er zijn en waar de ieren zelfs niet op ingaan of wrom zouden ze iemand uit belgie willen boven een ier die iers spreekt en wanneer er 14% werkloosheid is in Ierland zelf??

De locatie van je werk (leixlip) is ook niet echt schitterend. Ofwel dichtbij je werk wonen in Leixlip; je zit financieel iets beter en betaald minder aan huur etc... maar dan zit je ver van dublin centrum (20km) en ga je niet veel ervan zien of meemaken. Ofwel zit je in dublin zelf en dan zit je in een achtergestelde buurt gelijk in één van die achtergestelde buurten van Brussel waar je weinig plezier aan zal beleven ofwel zit je in het centrum maar ik betwijfel of je dat zal kunnen betalen met dat loon (financieel zou het toch een slechte zet zijn dan).

Zijt ge zeker dat ge dit wil doen lol? Het is ook geen vakantie hé. Vanaf ge werkt zult ge met je werk bezig zijn en ik betwijfel of je veel van het land zal zien. Het klinkt allemaal leuk om in het buitenland te werken maar ge zit vrij snel in een 'ratrace' net zoals hier maar dan in moeilijkere omstanigheden omdat engels toch niet je moedertaal is waardoor je werk toch moeilijker zal verlopen, cultuur is ook anders, ieren zijn veel directer dan hier, meer druk om je job ook te doen, etc...

In ieder geval veel geluk maar ik vrees dat ge een verkeerde beslissing hebt genomen, al hoop ik van niet natuurlijk.
Parent
20.500€ bruto betekent 1350-1400 netto per maand (Ieren betalen maar 20% belastingen tussen 0 & ~40.000 €). Het laatste anderhalf jaar heb ik hier in België telkens als interim magazijnier gewerkt en verdiende ik rond de 1300€ netto (incl. maaltijdcheques en zeer voordelige fietsvergoeding). Veel jobs in België met een hoger loon ga ik met enkel een A2 niet vinden.
Kosten liggen niet zoveel hoger. Op die lijsten die de prijzen in hoofdsteden in Europa vergelijken staat Dublin maar een paar plaatsjes hoger dan Brussel, en ook ginds hebben ze Lidl's e.d. om goedkoper eten te kopen. Alleen het bier is daar een pak duurder dan hier, wat ergens wel vreemd is gezien het eigenlijk toch ook echt een bierland is.

Ik ga daar trouwens niet werken voor het geld hé. Ik ga ginds werken omdat zoiets toch (in principe) een heel leuke ervaring is. Wonen en werken in het buitenland is al jarenlang een kleine droom van me.

Ik ben van plan om een kamer te huren in Dublin, dicht tegen het centrum. Genre Borgerhout, Berchem, Kiel, Zuid. Ik heb zelf 15 jaar op't Kiel gewoond en nu weer op't Noord en ge zou die buurten inderdaad "achtergesteld" kunnen noemen, maar echt veel last heb ik nooit ondervonden. In tegenstelling tot in België is het in Dublin overigens zeer normaal om met verschillende mensen een huis te huren en ieder heeft dan zijn eigen kamer. Dit om hoge huurprijzen te drukken, waardoor ik verwacht maar ~450€ per maand te betalen (incl. kosten)

Ik ben heel zeker, toch merci voor de bezorgdheid ;-p
Parent
Ok, ge zijt lijk vastberaden!

In ieder geval zou ik graag je mening eens horen na een maand om te zien in hoeverre ge erover tevreden zijt of niet.

:)
Parent
Marginale samenleving/maatschappij in Dublin, maar voor de rest nog geen spijt dat ik naar hier ben gekomen.
Loon ligt hoger dan verwacht (1500 net), werkdruk is niet hoog en persoonlijk internetgebruik is toegelaten (facebooken terwijl de baas achter u staat, is geen enkel probleem), collega's zijn heel aangenaam, etc.

Het enige waar ik me aan mispakt heb, is de levenskost. Dublin is een pak duurder dan Antwerpen, maar mits goed te winkelen beperk je de meerkost wel.

Edit: en met het risico om racistisch te klinken: geen Marokkanen op elke hoek van de straat die show liggen te verkopen!

Edit 2: ook vergist wat het fietsen betreft. Heb ik al snel opgegeven, hier is gewoon geen fietscultuur en om 15 van de 20 km om 5u30 's morgens door de pikkendonkere (tenzij ik langs een halve autosnelweg fiets, daar is wel verlichting) dat bevalt me ook niet. Zeker niet nadat ik al 4 platte banden in de eerste week kreeg.

En ik heb een appartement in het centrum, voor 200€ per maand. Ik deel dat wel met een aantal mensen, but I don't care.
Parent
Goe om te horen :)

Je moet in feite wel ook kijken naar je brutoloon. Het feit dat dees vrij laag is wil zeggen dat elke procentuele loonsverhoging een stuk lager zal zijn dan gelijk in België (3% van 2400 bruto in België > 3% van 1700 bruto) maar algemeen gezien is 1500 netto natuurlijk helemaal niet slecht.

Er zitten misschien geen Marokanen maar denk als je die lower-class ieren ziet (beetje gelijk de britten wss) en hoe marginaal die zijn dan heb ek nog liever marokanen dan die verzeker -_-

Huurprijs is ni veel maja ge deelt natuurlijk appartement. Is ook iets wat ge moet willen. Is wel leuk voor een tijdje maar zou toch na verloop van tijd wat privacy willen. Ge kunt later natuurlijk altijd voor iets beters zoeken hé.

Da van da fietsen had ek wel verwacht tbh! Die banen zijn ginder gewoon veel te smal, ge zit op een paar cm van die bussen, afstand veel te ver + idd geen fietscultuur.

Btw, khad een aantal comments van je gelezen op 9lives dus kweet in feite al min of meer hoe je het stelt :DD
Parent
Ah, ge zit op 9lives? Wa is uw nick daar?

Ik ben er weer effe gebanned, mijne humor wordt niet begrepen! Kga me moeten inhouden, want een permban dreigt er aan te komen.

Met die loonsverhoging e.d. hou ik me echt niet bezig, ik ben hier maar voor 1,5 jaar maximum. Ik verwacht sowieso niet veel loonsverhoging te krijgen op die periode ;-p

Die lower class Ieren (knackers genaamd) kun je inderdaad vergelijken met Marokkanen. Alleen zijn Marokkanen ietsje agressiever en modebewuster. Hoe een hoop van de Dubliners erbij lopen, mar-gi-naal gewoon.

Een appartement delen is voor mij geen probleem, al ga ik dat ook niet voor de rest van mijn leven doen. Maar ik zie mij ook in België wel een tijdlang een huis/appartement delen om de kostprijs te drukken. Zó hard ben ik nu ook weer niet op mijn privacy gesteld, de voordelen overtreffen de nadelen vind ik.
Parent
Interesting. I have that as an option, working in Ireland. Could combine it with study.
May I ask you what kind of job you got there atm? Without being arrogant but 20k ain't that much right? Especially when it's fulltime and for Irish standards (what's said up here by Fizmo).
I didn't finish any study after highschool, so I don't got University degree just yet, but around a year ago I was looking for some jobs there, minimum of 30k year ranging to 40k and with some bluff it would be alright to apply for.
Parent
I don't have any university degrees nor any useful experience, so I can't demand too much. And 20.500€ is pretty much what I earned in Belgium the past 2 years. Difference between Belgium and Ireland is that in Ireland I only pay 20% taxes whilst in Belgium I pay 30-35% tax.
My job is called 'Dutch Technical Support Analyst', basically I'm a helpdesk employee who tries to solve other people's problems with a computer. 20.500€ is what I'd earn in Belgium too if I did the job, but as I said in Ireland you pay a lot less taxes.
Parent
Oke well you can always grow further if you fit well in the company. Most job vacancies I've found there were indeed some kind of customer care stuff. Personally I don't like being on the phone whole day, usely it aren't flexibale worktimes either. Besides you usely got small space for personal initiatives / freedom, cause usely bound to rules a lot. Doesn't have to be same in all companies so I might be totally wrong.

If not then country, language (nice accent), culture will make up for it! And if doing well perhaps better wage quickly? I think in other countries they look more at qualities and/or experience then on degrees alone like here.

At my previous job here I could start between 7 am and 9 am. I was usely there between 07.00 and 07.30 but if they would pinpoint me at some precise time I usely come to late :P

Quite curious how things will work out for you there. If things not go too well then at least you tried and can always make the trip back I suppose + the experience you gained there.
I know one of the reasons why Ireland is in economic discomfort is cause of the oversupply of houses/living spaces etc. Does that mean monthly costs / rent / house prices for that would get lower?
Any idea what a small house or decent appartment costs on a monthly basis?
Parent
No idea about the rent or a house/apart. as I'm looking for a room. It's normal in Dublin to share a house with 3-5 people to lower the rent for a single person.
Parent
QuoteOke well you can always grow further if you fit well in the company.
lol, with all due respect but these kind of jobs (helpdesk employee) are one of the shittiest jobs around. You can't grow further in these kind of jobs. These jobs are done by eastern europeans or lower class people because no one else want to do these jobs (working conitions are awfull and you work on basically minimum wage. Its also these kind of jobs who are outsourced to India.

For an eastern european these jobs are ok for them because in their own country they earn like 500 euro a month. In Ireland they get 1300-1400 euro, for them it's a good decision to take the job. For Rhand however it's not, he earns the same wage as in Belgium + his brut wage is much lower (taxes are higher in be) so any increase in wage will be much lower than here in Belgium.

These kind of jobs will do nothing for your career, even in the ict sector you can nothing with this 'experience'.

Rhand will do a shitjob with a shitwage (no offence) and if he does it for the 'adventure' like he says why does he pick Ireland??? Take a southern country for the climate or Germany/Switzerlan/Austria/Scaninvia for the quality of living but Ireland??? A country in crisis with 14% unemployment and just greenery like in Belgium??

Ireland still has a deficit of 9,5%. They will need to get it to 0% within 4 years so who u think is gonna pay for that?? Not the poor (they have no money), not the rich because they can avoid it by using loopholes but the working class. He is gonna face rising prices, rising taxes and will partly pay for the crisis in Ireland the coming years. Why u think lots of young, irish people left the country? And he is going there? lol...

He also cant live in the city centre because he cant afford it with his low wage (otherwise he cant save anything which he wont do) so he will live in some backwards region of dublin. Not my definition of adventure :/ Plus, he will cycle through the poorest regions of dublin to his work (outside dublin), regions with 20%+ unemployment, that's asking for trouble. Not to mention there is no bicycle culture in Ireland, only small roads which makes it dangerous for cyclists +no big roads where you can cycle fast & comfortable to your work. And 20 Km on small roads to your work will take 1,5h one way an 1,5h back aswell.

I rly cant understand his decision... You move to another country to improve your career (a interesting job opportunity), to improve your salary or working conditions but he got neither of them -_- If he rly wants to live/work in another country at least pick a job in a nice region/city/country -_-
Parent
I agree with you that helpdesk jobs, customer care or w/e phone jobs are shit... but if he works there for a few months, a year max... he can always look further into the country + his language and culture knowledge will improve fast. I know a guy in Scotland, started there with a shitty helpdesk job as well. But now he's been a cop there for around 5 years?
Building and using a network there should be fine. You don't become president in just one step ha!

Yes, there's a lot of unemployment there, but why would that stop him? He already has at least 1 quality which others don't by speaking Dutch and by having knowledge of business here if he bluffs a bit. Perhaps he's able to speak German as well.
What you mean by working conditions are awful except the wage he receives? If he has an official contract he won't be working 12 hours a day or something.

About the adventure part... well Ireland is quite a nice country imo. Differs for every person. I would never pick those countries you mentioned by example. Language is a plus as well, cause his basic English seems to be fine already. Cycling through 20% unemployment areas... asking for trouble? Depends what you are used to I guess.. I'm not impressed by that at all and I've seen enough dirty places.
Ireland has problems with fucking gypsies though, but I wouldn't let it scare me and there are thugs in every country. Climate isn't great but I can tell you I would be quite bored if I was in some super-sunny country where nothing happens. 2-weeks vacation in a beach-resort is fine, but after that I'm fine going back home to this shit climate, lol.

Dunno if he got a driving license or a car, I would just ship my car there or w/e and live in some relatively cheap but good house/appartment there. Then a 30 min drive each day wouldn't be much of a problem.
But yes with only a bike it's shit but if he likes bicycling a lot and waking up early, why not?

If it's indeed as bad as you say he will get back here on a certain day, but then at least he tried, which earns some respect imo. He who doesn't take risks won't achieve shit... if you want only certainties in your life, go work for the government, get a main contract there and do gray work until you're 70 or something if that makes you happy.

Adventure, good mentality/perseverance and realism. Mix that and +1.

Partially agree with you in general but he doesn't have any qualifications... so not that much choice. I kinda like bluffing myself into positions but you will need some basis-level to afford that.
And economy is shit everywhere, same as it will get back up on a certain time-scale. Doing a warehouse job in Belgium can't be that good either.
Parent
QuoteI agree with you that helpdesk jobs, customer care or w/e phone jobs are shit... but if he works there for a few months, a year max... he can always look further into the country + his language and culture knowledge will improve fast
He's going to Ireland because of the job (an interim bureau offered it him)... I doubt you have to see it as a 'start'. If he loses the job I think he's gonna return back to belgium, not gonna look out for another job. Also, Rhand said he's gonna go for 2-5 years (at that job). Not sure why you would do that shitjob for so long lol -_-

QuoteHe already has at least 1 quality which others don't by speaking Dutch
Not sure you'll be able to use that quality there, except idd for his job, dutch helpdesk employee :) I don't think you could use that language or 'quality' in another job in Ireland...

Quote Yes, there's a lot of unemployment there, but why would that stop him?

Quote Ireland has problems with fucking gypsies though, but I wouldn't let it scare me and there are thugs in every country.
Ya, ofc that is not gonna stop him...

Look, it's quite simple. He's doing a shitjob (where he cant use that experience for whatever he wants later) at minimum wage and will most likely live in a not so nice region of dublin. The question I ask myself is why? When you can get a better job in Germany or Switerlan which pays much better, in a much nicer country and where you dont have to travel 2h to your workplace.

And all I'm saying is the circumstances where he's going (high unemployment, bad neighbourhood, limited other job opportunities, facing higher taxes & costs of living + the location of his job which is 20km further) are awfull. Why go there and face those problems when you can easily avoid them?? It's like picking a shitpay of 20k above one of 30k or choosing to live in a backyard region when you can live in a nice region. I doubt he actually researched first before he took the job. He's a city person he says but then he sees the job is outside dublin (too late I guess...). Then he says he's gonna cycle for 20km while that would take 1,5h one way an 1,5h back (I dont think he knows it takes that long). Not sure he's gonna enjoy that in Ireland. The roads are a lot smaller eg. more dangerous there are barely cycling roads and there are no big roads to go to the other side of the city in a fast way.

Ya sure unemployment isn't his concern, sure there are worse things then gypsies, sure its his decision to cycle 15km etc... but it's like for me going to portugal to run behind a refuse collection vehicle in portugal for a shitpay, go every day for 2h to my workplace and back. Sure I can do that but I won't.

I got nothing against his decision by the way, I studied abroad and it was a fantastic experience (maybe that's why I know you have to be careful in such things, you never know where you end up) but it all seems weird. Ah well, will be interested to hear his opinion after a month :)

This was my last reply :)
Parent
Haha, deze replies heb ik nooit gelezen. Zo negatief jongen! :-D

Hier in Dublin zitten DUIZENDEN mensen van over heel Europa die hier voor een shitty helpdeskfunctie komen te werken, stuk voor stuk landen die een pak beter zijn om in te wonen en te werken dan Ierland, en toch komen ze naar hier. Ik ben blijkbaar niet de enige gek ;-)

En van dat 2-5 jaar hier wonen heb ik al snel afgezien, tegen maart 2013 ben ik ZEKER weer in Belgie.
Parent
Was ook niet te bedoeling dat ge da zou lezen :D Waarom moet gij ook terugkomen naar dees journal? :DDD

Maar was idd te negatief daar. Was toen waarschijnlijk in 'the mood' om es goe negatief te zijn -_- weer zo één van die dagen -_-
Parent
take 15kg sledge-hammer, hit your pc 5 times whit full power.. Go the nearest pc shop and buy new one, problem solved
happens to me sometimes with my gtx 460, but only when running games in fullscreen on steam, some n4v....dll or something
happens to me aswell but instead of bluescreen my monitor just turn off like there is no video card. I removed the overclock from the cpu and everything works fine now
I see, my friend overclocked my graphics card when I got it first, but I have reinstalled windows since. Do you think the overclcock will still be active even if I reinstalled windows?
Parent
hmm i dont know where gpu saves informations about overclock, you may have a try with MSI afterburner
Parent
I got a similar problem:

well actually i have two problems.

1. sometimes my pc goes on "power saving mode" everything seem to work, my keys and stuff, but the monitor shuts down, and all the programs too. turning the monitor on and off wont work. the only option is to reset my pc.

2. sometimes i get a green screen with vertical stripes on it (will make a decent pic when it happens again). Oh and it gives a terrible noice aswell. only option is to reset my pc.

what to do?
screen with stripes usually points towards vid-card that's broken, stripes all kinds of colors in a stripE & flikkering?
Parent
in a strip? its only light green/dark green
Parent
maybe your screen hz is too high
Parent
my screen was on 16 bit instead of 32 bit, changed that.
Parent
tube and berger are really nice!
Tube & Berger :)
ahh the sounds of my "youth"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ho4KN5nZJM
can some1 remember the epic remix of that tune? which one was it
"Vista tells me"
why the fuck are you listening vista ?????????????????

u should be listening xp x64
gl vista user
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