Jesse,

In an earlier post I think you mentioned that XP was giving you errors
about your Hard-drive while installing, In my experience, I have had
several windoze boxes give me errors about a known good Hard drive when
the issue was really the RAM. (I figured this out after swapping about
four HDs) 

I would suggest you remove all the ram but one module, and boot up. If
the problem goes away, put in another, until the problem starts. If the
problem does not go away, remove that module and put one of the others,
until you have ran all of the modules individually.

Memtest is good, but remember it can take only one out of I don't know
how many billions of memory address combinations to screw things up.

Luck,

Rob.  

-----Original Message-----
From: Jesse Kline [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Friday, February 07, 2003 4:43 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: (clug-talk) oops

Quoting Mark Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:  
 
> Honestly, you are crashing too much for it to be the AGP bug. It could
be   
> your Nvidia drivers.  
  
Well I've tried the opensource and commercial drivers now, and there
doesn 
seem to be much of a change. Unfortunately I don't have another graphics
card 
lying around to try out. Is there any sort of diagnostics software, or
list of 
kernel error codes that might help me? 
 
Jesse   

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