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I have a desktop computer that I set up and it was working perfectly before I gave it to my brother. I honestly have no clue what he did to it. It starts up and once it hits the first stage post screen, there is a rows/columns of artifacts that look like little rgb tick marks (looks like this: l l l l l l). Then it'll go to the second stage post screen and the artifacts are the same but change to a white color. On the second stage post screen, it'll say "Verifying DMI pool data" and then "Unable to boot". I don't remember what I tried because it's been sitting around for a while now. I'm gonna have a go at it again and see if I can fix it.
If I don't manage to fix it, would you be able to fix this? How much would it cost? Would I have to drive to you? TIA
Built. I don't have hardware specs for it right now. I do know it's running on OS is Microsoft XP SP3. I'm rebooting it right now and doing a clean install to find out if it's a bad sector or not on the HDD.
Already tried with 4-5 different HDDs I have laying around. Tested each on my own computer to make sure they worked before installing them on the busted computer.
He might be talking about the sound drivers that are on the motherboard. If not, and he's talking about a PCI sound card, then yeah I would get a new one instead of wasting time.
He might be talking about the sound drivers that are on the motherboard. If not, and he's talking about a PCI sound card, then yeah I would get a new one instead of wasting time.
You can have more than 1 sound card with no problems, but instead of waste hours trying to fix or find the drivers is better just get a new one that comes with the drivers.
You can have more than 1 sound card with no problems, but instead of waste hours trying to fix or find the drivers is better just get a new one that comes with the drivers.
Yeah I know. I was going to go buy a sound card for my pc, but decided that I didn't need the high quality sound when the surround sound I have isn't that great. Finding drivers shouldn't be too hard though, especially if it was a stock model that are sold in stores. But if there is a lot of complications, I would just go ahead and buy the card.
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