Only thing that would come to mind for me is the fact that ‘kernel’ is memory associated. However I dug around and found this quoted on another site.
‘Use ''Run'' and type ''regedit''[br]
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HKEYLOCALMACHINE > SYSTEM > Currentcontrolset > control > graphicsdrivers. Right click ''graphicsdrivers'', click new >Dword (32-bit) value. Modify the value to 8[br]
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[br]
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HKEYLOCALMACHINE > SYSTEM > Currentcontrolset > control > graphicsdrivers. Right click ''graphicsdrivers'', click new >Dword (32-bit) value. Modify the value to 8
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What I did next was delete ALL of my graphic driver installed (the nvidia one). It will swap to the build-in one on your motherboard.[br]
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What I did next was delete ALL of my graphic driver installed (the nvidia one). It will swap to the build-in one on your motherboard.
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Then use driver sweeper, select nvidia, and let it erase ALL of your nvidia driver files.[br]
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Then use driver sweeper, select nvidia, and let it erase ALL of your nvidia driver files.
I then re-installed the nvidia driver through the installation CD I got with the graphic card, and did NOT get any updates.’
Only thing that would come to mind for me is the fact that ‘kernel’ is memory associated. However I dug around and found this quoted on another site.
‘Use ''Run'' and type ''regedit''[br]
HKEYLOCALMACHINE > SYSTEM > Currentcontrolset > control > graphicsdrivers. Right click ''graphicsdrivers'', click new >Dword (32-bit) value. Modify the value to 8[br]
[br]
What I did next was delete ALL of my graphic driver installed (the nvidia one). It will swap to the build-in one on your motherboard.[br]
Then use driver sweeper, select nvidia, and let it erase ALL of your nvidia driver files.[br]
I then re-installed the nvidia driver through the installation CD I got with the graphic card, and did NOT get any updates.’