I recently "upgraded" to Windows XP from Windows 2000, and I'm getting system crashes more than I was under Win2K. It's not that often by Windows standards, maybe every few days, but the problem is I can't get any idea of what the crash is, because the event that Windows writes to the system log looks like this:
Error code 000000d1, parameter1 f563e4f6, parameter2 00000002, parameter3 00000000,
parameter4 f563e4f6.
For more information, see Help and Support Center at
http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp.
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That's just wonderful. Under Windows 2000, it would at least tell me what DLL or SYS file was at fault, now I get a bunch of fscking hex numbers that I can't do anything with. Sure, Windows invites you to submit the crash to their system, and when you do, it tells you "Oh, this is in one of your drivers. But we're not going to tell you which one. Sorry!" I don't know if this is some not-so-sneaky way to rake in more support dollars, but it's really frustrating to not know which driver or program to replace or remove in order to get system stability. I don't expect the kind of uptime my Linux box gets, but I'd sure like to see the >1 month I'd get with Win2K instead of crashes 2-3 times a week with XP.
So, does anyone know of any other way I can get more information on where my XP crashes are coming from?