Blue Screen Error 7e Windows 7
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a friend this weekend. He was paving an old HP Envy laptop (although this happens on some Dell Inspirons blue screen error windows 7 64 bit as well) and was getting a blue screen in the middle
Blue Screen Error Windows 7 Repair Tool
of install. Then, of course, if you're not looking at it you'll just reboot and drop back into blue screen error windows 7 crash dump setup and get the "the computer restarted unexpectedly or encountered an unexpected error." At this point he was in a setup loop. "HIDCLASS.SYS" is the driver that failed. HID http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_7-performance/windows-7-pro-64-blue-screen-bccode-7e/b254c5e5-0b0a-47d0-afa7-d062f296fdc8 means Human Interface Device, and that means "keyboards or mice" for the most part. Errors in HIDCLASS.SYS, especially during setup, almost always means that there's trouble with an attached keyboard or attached mouse. I asked my buddy if he had a mouse attached and he did. He removed the mouse, and started setup over again. Setup succeeded. Then, he http://www.hanselman.com/blog/FIXEDBlueScreenOfDeathBSOD7EInHIDCLASSSYSWhileInstallingWindows7.aspx spent about an hour (and several reboots) getting Windows 7 "gold" (which was released in July of 2009, almost 5 years ago) up to date with patches, service pack 1, and the latest drivers. Then he was able to attach his mouse and it works fine. Sponsor: Big thanks to Mindscape for joining us and sponsoring the blog feed this week! I discovered Raygun.io and started using it for my side project and I LOVE it. Get notified of your software’s bugs as they happen! Raygun.io has error tracking solutions for every major programming language and platform - Start a free trial in under a minute! «This URL shortener situation is official... | Blog Home | Guide to Freeing up Disk Space under Win...» About Scott Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author. About Newsletter Sponsored By Hosting By Comments [14] Share on: Twitter, Facebook, Google+ or use the
Fix Blue Screen of Death Stop Error 0x0000007e in Windows 7 Windows and Linux Tutorials from Howtech SubscribeSubscribedUnsubscribe25,22725K Loading... Loading... Working... Add to Want to watch this again later? Sign in to add this video to a playlist. Sign https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XzOnTOFxoc0 in Share More Report Need to report the video? Sign in to report inappropriate content. Sign in Transcript Statistics 168,239 views 260 Like this video? Sign in to make your opinion count. Sign in http://www.techspot.com/community/topics/frequent-bsods-on-win7-x64-including-7e-error.171514/ 261 80 Don't like this video? Sign in to make your opinion count. Sign in 81 Loading... Loading... Transcript The interactive transcript could not be loaded. Loading... Loading... Rating is available when the blue screen video has been rented. This feature is not available right now. Please try again later. Published on Jul 5, 2013Learn what causes the blue screen of death stop error 0x0000007e. Furthermore, follow this tutorial to learn how to resolve this error.Don't forget to check out our site http://howtech.tv/ for more free how-to videos!http://youtube.com/ithowtovids - our feedhttp://www.facebook.com/howtechtv - join us on facebookhttps://plus.google.com/1034403827176... - our group in Google+In this tutorial, blue screen error we will teach you how to fix the blue screen of death stop error 0x0000007e in windows 7.The error "0x0000007e" occurs when you remove a USB video device or when you shut down the system. When a USB video device is unloaded, the error occurs due to a race condition in the USB Video Driver.Step 1 -- When does the error occurThis error suddenly appears when your Windows is booting in normal condition and then your system restarts automatically.Step 2 -- Download hotfixOnce the system will load in normal condition, download the hotfix for this error from the support site of Microsoft.Step 3 -- Provide an email addressOnce you have clicked on the Hotfix Download Available button, you will be redirected to another page where you will have to provide your email address. A link to the hotfix will be emailed to you.Step 4 -- Extract the filesOnce you have downloaded the hotfix, double click to unzip the file and specify the location where you want the extracted file to be available. For the purpose of this tutorial, we will extract the file to our DesktopStep 5 -- Open Windows Update Standalone InstallerNext, double click on the hotfix file in order
TechSpot RSS Get our weekly newsletter Search TechSpot Trending Hardware The Web Culture Mobile Gaming Apple Microsoft Google Reviews Graphics Laptops Smartphones CPUs Storage Cases Keyboard & Mice Outstanding Features Must Reads Hardware Software Gaming Tips & Tricks Best Of Downloads Latest Downloads Popular Apps Editors Picks Device Drivers Product Finder New Releases New PC Games Laptops Smartphones Routers Storage Motherboards Monitors Forums Recent Activity Today's Posts News Comments TechSpot Forums Forums Community Ask a Question Today's Posts Frequent BSODs on Win7 x64, including 7eerror Bylinj Sep 30, 2011 Post New Reply Hello all! I hope you are well. I have been having troubles with my computer (2e stop errors and so on), which I assumed was my graphics card overheating (reaching 90+ Celsius, probably bad), so I swapped it out for a new card and reformatted. I've now had three BSODs in about 6 hours, and this is a bit confusing! At first I thought it was my external HDD (Western Digital Elements, causes BIOS to hang for a few more seconds than necessary and also causes other USB device initialization (keyboard, mouse, Powermate) on Windows startup to hang), but the second BSOD showed up with a message about nvlddmkm.sys (Nvidia driver?). The third showed up with 7e, which as I understand it is not very descriptive by itself. I've run memtest86 overnight (approximately 7 hours), but I forgot to check how many passes. It didn't find any errors, though (4GB of DDR3 ram). Attached are the minidumps; would it be possible to diagnose the problem from these alone? Thanks so much! Edit, specs: MSI 890gxm + x6 1055t A-Data 2x2GB 1333 (g series) MSI n460gtx hawk Seasonic x750 PSU Windows 7 x64 SP1 Ultimate The BSODs occur at any time; I was watching a 1080p movie off the WD external and got one, and I was staring at the web browser and got one... Attached Files: Minidump.zip File size: 79.3 KB Views: 2 Sep 30, 2011 #1 Route44 TechSpot Ambassador Posts: 11,966 +70 Though not in the files you attached you did menti