![]() ![]() ![]() LAPTOP RUNNING FAIRLY COOL Are the vents blocked? NO Are the fans still in good order and spinning at full speeds? YES Have you got Trusteer Rapport installed on the machine? NEVER HEARD OF IT Do you have an excessive number of fonts installed? NO, FRESH INSTALL OF XP how big are your registry files? SEE PREVIOUS ANSWER All of these can have a seriously detrimental effect on your machine.The CISA Vulnerability Bulletin provides a summary of new vulnerabilities that have been recorded by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) National Vulnerability Database (NVD) in the past week. Are any other processes particularly active during the VRD save? NO AS PER PREVIOUS ANSWERIs the drive in good order - no SMART issues being reported? YES SEATOOLS LONG TEST PERFORMED A WEEK AGODo the problems disappear with the wireless adapter disabled? HAVEN'T TRIED Have you run MemTest to verify the RAM is OK? RAN MEMTEST86+ - NO PROBLEM Try running with just one stick of RAM? POSSIBLY IF ALL OTHER OPTIONS EXHAUSTED Check temps. Is the Task Manager showing a lot of cpu usage or hard drive activity before you start your save in VRD NO, SYSTEM IS BASICALLY IDLE. Is there some sort of debugging flag I can switch on to try to find out what is causing these problems? I've looked in the logfile and couldn't see anything obviously wrong. ![]() I would need to do some more testing to confirm definitively, but this doesn't seem to happen at any other time so the finger is firmly pointing in the direction of VRD. Saving a video using VRD also seems to coincide with the WiFi adapter running into trouble and repeatedly disconnecting from/re-connecting to the router (lots of 42 events written to the System log).VLC is then fine again until I use VRD to save another file, after which it will again crash when trying to play a video. After saving/attempting to save a file, when I then try to play a video file in VLC 2.2.1 it causes VLC to crash immediately. ![]() Copying a file from the source folder to the target folder in Explorer works fine, so it is not a general I/O issue.
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