I recently upgraded to WinXP, and installed some new components along with it. I just got a new stick of RAM, some generic PC133 128 MB chip that I bought used. I plugged it in and turned the computer on, only to have WinXP give me some kind of weird error. When I rebooted, I noticed that my processor was registering at 750 MHz instead of the usual 1000 MHz. I checked BIOS, and sure enough, my clock multiplier had been dropped automatically to 100 MHz instead of 133 MHz, along with my RAM speed. I went ahead and left the settings alone and Windows booted normally.
I figured I had a bad stick of RAM, but I wanted to know how bad it was. I started incrementally adjusting the clock speed up and finally got an error at 131 MHz, only 2 MHz below normal. Then I decided to switch the RAM over to a different slot and see if that changed anything. It did, and now I could boot as normal at 133 MHz. Weird, I thought, but went ahead and went into Windows and started mucking around. Then I started getting a bunch of IE6 errors, when I had been getting none before. IE was crashing about every five minutes or so, even with only one window open. I surmised that the RAM was causing the error and decided to pull the chip once and for all.
I turned off the computer and pulled the chip, and restarted. My computer still registered at 1 GHz and now showed 256 MB RAM. WinXP started loading up, then I got a blue screen. That's weird, because it's the first time that happened. I couldn't really read what it said because it flashed up pretty fast, and then rebooted. I let it do so, thinking maybe it was just one of those random errors you get when starting Windows sometimes. But the error happened again, and this time I could read it -- it said something about the registry either being corrupt or deleted, and WinXP could not boot. So this time I picked the option that says "Last Known Good Configuration." Same error. I try again, this time in safe mode, and get the same error again.
Long story short, I had to reinstall WinXP from scratch. Luckily, my data was safe and it was a pretty fresh install anyway, so not much has to be reinstalled (though I did almost pull out my hair trying to figure out why my network card had stopped working -- turns out I'd transposed two digits in my "Computer Name" so the network didn't recognize me and let me logon!)
I would almost think this was a virus, but I had a scanner (just installed and updated two days ago) running the whole time.
Anyway, that's the first time I ever heard of RAM screwing up a computer like that. I can only assume it was the RAM, as that was the only thing I changed. Sheesh, sometimes I hate computers.
I figured I had a bad stick of RAM, but I wanted to know how bad it was. I started incrementally adjusting the clock speed up and finally got an error at 131 MHz, only 2 MHz below normal. Then I decided to switch the RAM over to a different slot and see if that changed anything. It did, and now I could boot as normal at 133 MHz. Weird, I thought, but went ahead and went into Windows and started mucking around. Then I started getting a bunch of IE6 errors, when I had been getting none before. IE was crashing about every five minutes or so, even with only one window open. I surmised that the RAM was causing the error and decided to pull the chip once and for all.
I turned off the computer and pulled the chip, and restarted. My computer still registered at 1 GHz and now showed 256 MB RAM. WinXP started loading up, then I got a blue screen. That's weird, because it's the first time that happened. I couldn't really read what it said because it flashed up pretty fast, and then rebooted. I let it do so, thinking maybe it was just one of those random errors you get when starting Windows sometimes. But the error happened again, and this time I could read it -- it said something about the registry either being corrupt or deleted, and WinXP could not boot. So this time I picked the option that says "Last Known Good Configuration." Same error. I try again, this time in safe mode, and get the same error again.
Long story short, I had to reinstall WinXP from scratch. Luckily, my data was safe and it was a pretty fresh install anyway, so not much has to be reinstalled (though I did almost pull out my hair trying to figure out why my network card had stopped working -- turns out I'd transposed two digits in my "Computer Name" so the network didn't recognize me and let me logon!)
I would almost think this was a virus, but I had a scanner (just installed and updated two days ago) running the whole time.
Anyway, that's the first time I ever heard of RAM screwing up a computer like that. I can only assume it was the RAM, as that was the only thing I changed. Sheesh, sometimes I hate computers.