Quote from: deanwebb on February 17, 2024, 09:50:11 PMIs this a clean installation or an upgrade?
If an upgrade, is there any way you can do a clean install?
Quote from: icecream-guy on February 16, 2024, 04:29:37 PMhow can I investigate this without forking out $$$ to Micros**tSeems like it did something:
from windows 11 system event log: today
The computer has rebooted from a bugcheck. The bugcheck was: 0x0000004e (0x0000000000000007, 0x00000000004d420e, 0x0000000000000001, 0x0000000000000000). A dump was saved in: C:\WINDOWS\Minidump\021624-37796-01.dmp. Report Id: af82ef39-64d8-405d-a293-0f0bc1a6fb9e.
I looked at the .dmp file with wordpad but it was all gibberish. Seems like I am hitting something like this every day now for the past week or so.
I did purchase Norton Utilities Ultimate last week, and it did clean up a bunch of crap on my computer.
maybe it's time to run SFC /scannow.
Beginning system scan. This process will take some time.
Beginning verification phase of system scan.
Verification 100% complete.
Windows Resource Protection found corrupt files and successfully repaired them.
For online repairs, details are included in the CBS log file located at
windir\Logs\CBS\CBS.log. For example C:\Windows\Logs\CBS\CBS.log. For offline
repairs, details are included in the log file provided by the /OFFLOGFILE flag.
Quote from: deanwebb on February 06, 2024, 09:39:19 AMThe network device that the client is attached to handles the DHCP request. The request is bound to a MAC address, so the network device makes sure that the request gets back to the device with that MAC address. In the case of multiple DHCP servers, the first to respond will be the one the client goes with.