Here's another aspect of the problem: The laptop in question is the one I
have been using for a few years with WinXP primarily and Win7 occasionally.
This memory problem does not take place with WinXP, either regular or in SAFE
MODE. It's only a problem with Win7 SAFE MODE and Win7 System Repair. So,
it's very unlikely to be a hardware issue.
>
> The defective driver is most likely the problem, but I have not been able
> to locate it. I'll give your suggestion a try.
>
>>
>>It's a hardware error message that is caused by either faulty memory or an
>>incompatible driver for something. Note that the memory could by system
>>memory or graphics card memory. My bet would be a driver issue. You could
>>run something like http://www.memtest86.com/ to rule out hardware.
>>
>>Steve Troy
>>
>>
>>----- Chris Trask <christrask@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>| Not necessarily. It operates properly in normal Win7 mode. Doing
>>|the memory scan in normal mode ends up with no problems found.
>>|
>>| >
>>| >A memory parity error is a hardware problem.
>>
>
>Chris
>
>When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro
> - Hunter S. Thompson
Chris
When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro
- Hunter S. Thompson
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