Body & Soul0 min ago
Funny display
Just lately, I can only have it on for approximately 8 hours, and then the display starts to mess up. Certain icons that were there when I started up will suddenly turn black or disappear. Other icons will still be there, but won't have anything to say what they are , eg, if I go to 'turn off computer' in the start menu, instead of there being icons with restart, standby and turn off written underneath against the blue background, it'll just be the icons, no background, nothing written to say which is which. If I'm playing solitaire and drag a card, the space where the card originally was will turn black. It's fine again once I restart.
I thought it might be something to do with virtual memory, and have followed instructions to allocate more disk space to it than the windows xp default setting allocates, but it's not helped. Does anyone have any idea what I can do about this? Sorry if it's something really obvious, but it's hard to google when you don't really know what you're googling for (no error messages or the like).
Thanks.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by squiggle. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Have you added/changed any hardware inside the PC? (eg. graphics card, sound card, network card - anything at all). Also, update you anti-virus and run a full sweep.
Check the event viewer to see if it has logged anything about what is going on.
Press Start, select Run and type eventvwr, press OK. The event log screen appears. Check the System and Application logs for any warnings and errors that occur around the same time as your issues arise. Please post back and let me know what you found, if anything.
I've checked the event log, as you suggested. In system there are a few Service Control Manager errors. In applications, there are lot of errors from source VSS. The log goes back to Oct 2004, when these VSS errors were fairly infrequent, and they've got progressively more frequent up to now. Is this the culprit? Thanks for your help so far.
squiggle: glad i could be of some assistance. the VSS errors do appear to be the cause. I will need more info though. Please go back to the Event Log and select a few of the recent VSS errors and copy the details exactly and post them here in the forum. I will look through them and see what I can determine for you. I think it is driver related though!?
In the mean time, also run a customised Windows Update (it usually gives you an option of Express or Custom). This will scan your PC for updates required for the operating system.
To run Windows update, open Internet Explorer and from the Tools menue, select Windows Update. Take all the 'critical' updates listed, and any of the 'driver' updates as well. This may help you while i look into you VSS issue.
Tritan - I've been to Windows update and it's brought up SP2. I never got round to downloading it originally because so many people seemed to have problems with it. Time to install it, do you think?
The errors do seem to be Volume Shadow Copy related. Here is one of the recent errors. They all appear to have the same details. In the meantime, I'll have a look and see if there are any diffrerent ones.:
Event Type: Error
Event Source : VSS
Event Category: None
Event ID: 8193
Date: 04/08/2005
Time: 01:21:48
User: N/A
Computer: Stephanie
Description:
Volume Shadow Copy service error: Unexpected error calling routine CoCreateInstance hr = 0x80070005
For more information, see Help and Support Center at http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp
Data:
0000: 57 52 54 57 52 54 49 43 WRTWRTIC
0008: 32 31 31 33 00 00 00 00 2113....
0010: 57 52 54 57 52 54 49 43 WRTWRTIC
0018: 32 30 37 38 00 00 00 00 2078
Okay, I have looked into it and this is what I found....
Firstly, you must update to the XP Service Pack 2. I know it's had some issues, but it's been around long enough now. I waited and waited and finally installed it. Some applications may be effected, but then that shows they were badly coded applications! Also, once SP2 is installed, there are many further updates - two in particular that will fix this problem of yours.
The VSS problem has something to do with the MSXML process on your PC. This needs to be updated/patched (which SP2 and further updates, will do).
Failing that, unfortunately for you - I have read that in your particular case, the COM+ Subsystem has not registered properly when you installed Windows (this implies that the VSS error has been going on since the first time you installed the XP). This means that you will have to re-install the operating system, or choose the repair option when you boot from the XP software CD. But before you do this, please update to SP2 etc. to see if that solves things.
Another "solution" would be to disable the VSS service, but i dont recommend this as there may be some unforseen side-effects. If this is the route you want to go down, let me know and i will instruct you on what you need to do.
I hope this helps you in some way, and please keep me informed of any progress you make - i'd be interested to see this through.
I was looking up Volume Shadow Copy, and read some info on COM+. It said that this should be enabled, and if it isn't, to start it. If I try to start it, I get the error message ' Could not start the COM+ Event System service on local computer. Error 126: The specified module could not be found'. I take it this will still need repairing, but I will see what it's like in the morning anyway.
Thanks Tritan. You've been a great help. I'll post back tomorrow.
http://support.microsoft.com/?id=833167
http://support.microsoft.com/?id=883955
Hi squiggle, how strange that the links they provide you do not seem to provide the download?
Service Pack 2 contained COM+ updates, so that should have addressed the issue. But if the COM+ was not initialised properly from the start (as per one of the articles i read had suggested), then maybe the patches are/will not working either? It may possibly be a good idea to run a repair install of the operating system.
Before you try any such thing, back up to disc any valuable information. This is a last resort though.