-=PCTechTalk=- Re: Windows XP BSOD When Attempting Wireless Network

  • From: Gman <gman.pctt@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <pctechtalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 5 Jan 2009 12:18:30 -0500

Sweet!  This confirms that the accidental ')' is actually a '0' and we can 
proceed without suspicion.    :)

Older errors indicate that your two laptops are not liking each other so 
much these days, but that's not what's affecting the problems you're facing 
right now.  We'll handle those separately.  In the meantime, I've been 
researching the heck out of this issue.

According to a source at Microsoft, this may be part of a known issue 
between the USB controller and other (could be any device) hardware drivers. 
Because it's such a rare issue, they've been unable to track down the actual 
cause, but there is a repair that removes it.

Without physically disconnecting anything from your system, go to Control 
Panel > System > Device Manager
Under the Universal Serial Bus Controller section, uninstall each of the 
devices one by one (click the + sign to expose them).

After that, click on Scan for hardware changes to reinstall them back. 
Restart your computer and everything should be back to normal.

Let me know if the problem still exists or if anything else appears 'out of 
whack' afterwards.

Happy Holidays,
Gman

"The only dumb questions are the ones we fail to ask"

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "tempting2taanzaa" <tempting2taanzaa@xxxxxxxx>
To: <pctechtalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, January 05, 2009 11:48 AM
Subject: -=PCTechTalk=- Re: Windows XP BSOD When Attempting Wireless Network


> Hi G:
>
> Ok, I have looked in event viewer and here is the report (I am almost sure
> this is the one after the BSOD though there are a couple more red "x's"
> listed under the system area:
>
> Type: Error Date: 1/4/2009 Time: 8:29:23 PM Source:
> System Error Category: (102)
> Event: 1003 User: N/A Computer: TOSHIBA
>
> Description:
> Error code 0000009c, parameter 1 00000000, parameter 2 8054e0f0, parameter 
> 3
> a2000000, parameter 4 84010400.
>
> Data: Bytes
> 0000: 53 79 73 74 65 6d 20 45
> System E
> 0008: 72 72 6f 72 20 20 45 72 rror
> Er
> 0010: 72 6f 72 20 63 6f 64 65 ror
> code
> 0018: 20 30 30 30 30 30 30 39
> 00000009
> 0020: 63 20 20 50 61 72 61 6d c
> Param
> 0028: 65 74 65 72 73 20 30 30
> eters
> 0030: 30 30 30 30 30 30 2c 20
> 000000,
> 0038: 38 30 35 34 65 30 66 30
> 8054e0f0
> 0040: 2c 20 61 32 30 30 30 30 ,
> a20000
> 0048: 30 30 2c 20 38 34 30 31 00,
> 8401
> 0050: 30 34 30 30 0400
>
> Data: Words
> 0000: 74737953 45206d65 726f7272 72452020
> 0010: 20726f72 65646f63 30303020 39303030
> 0020: 50202063 6d617261 72657465 30302073
> 0030: 30303030 202c3030 34353038 30663065
> 0040: 3261202c 30303030 202c3030 31303438
> 0050: 30303430
>
> As I said before there are other red "x's" in the system area (I'll list
> them, but from the descriptions some don't seem applicable):

...

>
> I opened device manager and there were no yellow triangles or errors
> reported there.
>
> Sorry this post is so long. 

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