Machine Check Error Ubuntu
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communities company blog Stack Exchange Inbox Reputation and Badges sign up log in tour help Tour Start here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings machine check error usb boot and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow machine check error linux the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Ask Ubuntu Questions Tags Users machine check error windows 10 Badges Unanswered Ask Question _ Ask Ubuntu is a question and answer site for Ubuntu users and developers. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: asus machine check error Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise to the top Machine check error when booting from USB up vote 0 down vote favorite I am trying to install 13.10. I have created a startup USB with the built-in startup disk creator and I have also tried using unetbootin, both give me this error
Machine Check Error Windows 7
on boot-up, just a black screen with the message "Machine check error". I am using an ASUS zenbook UX31. It is working fine otherwise, and I have boot from USB without problems with other versions of Ubuntu several times before. I have seen this duplicate but the accepted answer there is a workaround, not a solution - I can not boot from CD because I am using an ultrabook without any CD drive. boot usb 13.10 share|improve this question asked Oct 19 '13 at 20:14 wim 3,962185488 add a comment| 2 Answers 2 active oldest votes up vote 2 down vote accepted The problem is related to "secure boot" feature. The fix is toggling the UEFI setting in BIOS. share|improve this answer answered Oct 22 '13 at 1:33 wim 3,962185488 add a comment| up vote 1 down vote I had the same problem on my Toshiba Satellite p850, "Machine check error". After disabling "Virtualization Technology" in BIOS I could boot from USB stick without problems. Edit: On further investigation, it seems to require toggling rather than disabling. Tested with Ubuntu 13.10 and Ubu
communities company blog Stack Exchange Inbox Reputation and Badges sign up log in tour help Tour Start here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings
Machine Check Exception Error
and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow machine check exception windows 7 the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Ask Ubuntu Questions Tags Users mce: [hardware error]: machine check events logged Badges Unanswered Ask Question _ Ask Ubuntu is a question and answer site for Ubuntu users and developers. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: http://askubuntu.com/questions/362063/machine-check-error-when-booting-from-usb Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise to the top Machine check error on ASUS while booting from USB up vote 2 down vote favorite I put the last Ubuntu iso on my USB stick using UNetBootin, after formatting it to fat32. I've already done that before with other operating systems and it http://askubuntu.com/questions/205706/machine-check-error-on-asus-while-booting-from-usb worked. I can't actually boot Ubuntu from USB since I get a black screen with the error "Machine check error" on top the an automatic reboot happens. The error appears right after the boot, I can't see anything else before. I'm using my ASUS X54L latop. Does anybody know how to solve this? Installation from CD/DVD works. asus share|improve this question asked Oct 24 '12 at 10:49 user100453 112 add a comment| 1 Answer 1 active oldest votes up vote 0 down vote I encountered the same issue in my ZenBook : booting on a live debian trying to boot on the installed system (didn't work, for another reason) retry to boot on the live system => MACHINE CHECK ERROR and no boot. I tried to boot another live usb key (with grub, not with syslinux) and it worked Then I retried to boot my live debian system again => it worked So it just seemed that the machine check error is coming from the fact that your machine is in a wrong state internally, and booting on something else triggered a res