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  #46  
Old February 16th 10, 06:33 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
William B. Lurie
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 811
Default Event viewer

Jose wrote:
On Feb 12, 6:10 am, "William B. Lurie" wrote:
You nice folks led me to Event Viewer not too long ago, and
in studying it, I find under Applications that Automatic Live
Update is being run every 3 hours. It isn't my Norton Anti-
Virus Live Update, and I do not allow Windows Live Update to
run. Or at least I think I have it set so that I run Windows
Update when I choose to do so.

How can I track down what is running so often, and preventing
my system from hibernating as a result?

Thank you.


Provide more information:

Minimize back and forth Q&A and eliminate guesswork and assumptions:

Click Start, Run and in the box enter:

msinfo32

Click OK, and when the System Summary info appears, click Edit, Select
All, Copy and then paste
back here.

There will be some personal information (like System Name and User
Name), and whatever appears to
be private information to you, just delete from the pasted
information.

What are your system settings regarding Hibernation? Mine is set to
hibernate after 30 minutes of inactivity, but I can also hibernate
anytime. Which does not work for you?

Has hibernation ever worked?

If you click Start, Turn Off Computer and press the Shift key, does
the Stand By button turn into a Hibernate button and then if you click
Hibernate does your system enter hibernation?

Let's see this event you see:

Look in the Event Viewer for clues around the time of the incident

Here is a method to post the specific information about individual
events.

To see the Event Viewer logs, click Start, Settings, Control Panel,
Administrative Tools, Event Viewer.

A shortcut to Event Viewer is to click Start, Run and in the box
enter:

%SystemRoot%\system32\eventvwr.msc

Click OK to launch the Event Viewer.

The most interesting logs are usually the Application and System.
Some logs may be almost or completely empty.
Not every event is a problem, some are informational messages that
things are working okay and some are warnings.
No event should defy reasonable explanation.

Each event is sorted by Date and Time. Errors will have red Xs,
Warnings will have yellow !s.
Information messages have white is. Not every Error or Warning event
means there is a serious issue.
Some are excusable at startup time when Windows is booting. Try to
find just the events at the date
and time around your problem.

If you double click an event, it will open a Properties windows with
more information. On the right are
black up and down arrow buttons to scroll through the open events. The
third button that looks like
two pages on top of each other is used to copy the event details to
your Windows clipboard.

When you find an interesting event that occurred around the time of
your issue, click the third button
under the up and down arrows to copy the details and then you can
paste the details (right click, Paste
or CTRL-V) the detail text back here for analysis.

To get a fresh start on any Event Viewer log, you can choose to clear
the log (backing up the log is offered),
then reproduce your issue, then look at just the events around the
time of your issue.


Okay, Jose, one mo' time:

Event Type: Error
Event Source: ati2mtag
Event Category: CRT
Event ID: 45062
Date: 2/16/2010
Time: 1:03:13 PM
User: N/A
Computer: COMPAQ-2006
Description:
CRT invalid display type
Data:
0000: 00 00 00 00 01 00 5a 00 ......Z.
0008: 2c 00 00 00 06 b0 00 c0 ,....°.À
0010: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........
0018: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........
0020: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........

The above is the Event that occurs every time the
Power Options is invoked (I think). How do I
find out what it doesn't like about my CRT?
Ads
  #47  
Old February 17th 10, 11:50 AM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
William B. Lurie
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 811
Default Event viewer

William B. Lurie wrote:
Jose wrote:
On Feb 12, 6:10 am, "William B. Lurie" wrote:
You nice folks led me to Event Viewer not too long ago, and
in studying it, I find under Applications that Automatic Live
Update is being run every 3 hours. It isn't my Norton Anti-
Virus Live Update, and I do not allow Windows Live Update to
run. Or at least I think I have it set so that I run Windows
Update when I choose to do so.

How can I track down what is running so often, and preventing
my system from hibernating as a result?

Thank you.


Provide more information:

Minimize back and forth Q&A and eliminate guesswork and assumptions:

Click Start, Run and in the box enter:

msinfo32

Click OK, and when the System Summary info appears, click Edit, Select
All, Copy and then paste
back here.

There will be some personal information (like System Name and User
Name), and whatever appears to
be private information to you, just delete from the pasted
information.

What are your system settings regarding Hibernation? Mine is set to
hibernate after 30 minutes of inactivity, but I can also hibernate
anytime. Which does not work for you?

Has hibernation ever worked?

If you click Start, Turn Off Computer and press the Shift key, does
the Stand By button turn into a Hibernate button and then if you click
Hibernate does your system enter hibernation?

Let's see this event you see:

Look in the Event Viewer for clues around the time of the incident

Here is a method to post the specific information about individual
events.

To see the Event Viewer logs, click Start, Settings, Control Panel,
Administrative Tools, Event Viewer.

A shortcut to Event Viewer is to click Start, Run and in the box
enter:

%SystemRoot%\system32\eventvwr.msc

Click OK to launch the Event Viewer.

The most interesting logs are usually the Application and System.
Some logs may be almost or completely empty.
Not every event is a problem, some are informational messages that
things are working okay and some are warnings.
No event should defy reasonable explanation.

Each event is sorted by Date and Time. Errors will have red Xs,
Warnings will have yellow !s.
Information messages have white is. Not every Error or Warning event
means there is a serious issue.
Some are excusable at startup time when Windows is booting. Try to
find just the events at the date
and time around your problem.

If you double click an event, it will open a Properties windows with
more information. On the right are
black up and down arrow buttons to scroll through the open events. The
third button that looks like
two pages on top of each other is used to copy the event details to
your Windows clipboard.

When you find an interesting event that occurred around the time of
your issue, click the third button
under the up and down arrows to copy the details and then you can
paste the details (right click, Paste
or CTRL-V) the detail text back here for analysis.

To get a fresh start on any Event Viewer log, you can choose to clear
the log (backing up the log is offered),
then reproduce your issue, then look at just the events around the
time of your issue.


Okay, Jose, one mo' time:

Event Type: Error
Event Source: ati2mtag
Event Category: CRT
Event ID: 45062
Date: 2/16/2010
Time: 1:03:13 PM
User: N/A
Computer: COMPAQ-2006
Description:
CRT invalid display type
Data:
0000: 00 00 00 00 01 00 5a 00 ......Z.
0008: 2c 00 00 00 06 b0 00 c0 ,....°.À
0010: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........
0018: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........
0020: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........

The above is the Event that occurs every time the
Power Options is invoked (I think). How do I
find out what it doesn't like about my CRT?

It is now worse than ever, and I suspect why.

I decided to do some Windows Update. Hadn't been there in about
a month. (I prefer Manual....I don't want all the updates, and
for good reason).

I let it install 27 updates, including Windows Search and IE8.

I did a reboot (of course), and some work, and went away,
figuring it would go to hibernate. Instead, 8 hours later,
it had not even gone to Screen Saver!

Looking at Event Viewer, it has 200 events recorded, in the top
two categories.

I'd like to back off and uninstall Windows Search and try again,
if somebody will tell me how to uninstall it. As for IE8, I can
probably download and IE7, uninstall IE8 and reinstall IE7. I
use Firefox as my main browser anyway.

Meanwhile, here is one of the messages in the Event Viewer. Note
that Windows Search was involved.

Event Type: Error
Event Source: Windows Search Service
Event Category: Gatherer
Event ID: 3024
Date: 2/16/2010
Time: 3:29:08 PM
User: N/A
Computer: COMPAQ-2006
Description:
The update cannot be started because the content sources cannot be
accessed. Fix the errors and try the update again.

Context: Windows Application, SystemIndex Catalog


For more information, see Help and Support Center at
http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp.


  #48  
Old February 17th 10, 11:50 AM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
William B. Lurie
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 811
Default Event viewer

William B. Lurie wrote:
Jose wrote:
On Feb 12, 6:10 am, "William B. Lurie" wrote:
You nice folks led me to Event Viewer not too long ago, and
in studying it, I find under Applications that Automatic Live
Update is being run every 3 hours. It isn't my Norton Anti-
Virus Live Update, and I do not allow Windows Live Update to
run. Or at least I think I have it set so that I run Windows
Update when I choose to do so.

How can I track down what is running so often, and preventing
my system from hibernating as a result?

Thank you.


Provide more information:

Minimize back and forth Q&A and eliminate guesswork and assumptions:

Click Start, Run and in the box enter:

msinfo32

Click OK, and when the System Summary info appears, click Edit, Select
All, Copy and then paste
back here.

There will be some personal information (like System Name and User
Name), and whatever appears to
be private information to you, just delete from the pasted
information.

What are your system settings regarding Hibernation? Mine is set to
hibernate after 30 minutes of inactivity, but I can also hibernate
anytime. Which does not work for you?

Has hibernation ever worked?

If you click Start, Turn Off Computer and press the Shift key, does
the Stand By button turn into a Hibernate button and then if you click
Hibernate does your system enter hibernation?

Let's see this event you see:

Look in the Event Viewer for clues around the time of the incident

Here is a method to post the specific information about individual
events.

To see the Event Viewer logs, click Start, Settings, Control Panel,
Administrative Tools, Event Viewer.

A shortcut to Event Viewer is to click Start, Run and in the box
enter:

%SystemRoot%\system32\eventvwr.msc

Click OK to launch the Event Viewer.

The most interesting logs are usually the Application and System.
Some logs may be almost or completely empty.
Not every event is a problem, some are informational messages that
things are working okay and some are warnings.
No event should defy reasonable explanation.

Each event is sorted by Date and Time. Errors will have red Xs,
Warnings will have yellow !s.
Information messages have white is. Not every Error or Warning event
means there is a serious issue.
Some are excusable at startup time when Windows is booting. Try to
find just the events at the date
and time around your problem.

If you double click an event, it will open a Properties windows with
more information. On the right are
black up and down arrow buttons to scroll through the open events. The
third button that looks like
two pages on top of each other is used to copy the event details to
your Windows clipboard.

When you find an interesting event that occurred around the time of
your issue, click the third button
under the up and down arrows to copy the details and then you can
paste the details (right click, Paste
or CTRL-V) the detail text back here for analysis.

To get a fresh start on any Event Viewer log, you can choose to clear
the log (backing up the log is offered),
then reproduce your issue, then look at just the events around the
time of your issue.


Okay, Jose, one mo' time:

Event Type: Error
Event Source: ati2mtag
Event Category: CRT
Event ID: 45062
Date: 2/16/2010
Time: 1:03:13 PM
User: N/A
Computer: COMPAQ-2006
Description:
CRT invalid display type
Data:
0000: 00 00 00 00 01 00 5a 00 ......Z.
0008: 2c 00 00 00 06 b0 00 c0 ,....°.À
0010: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........
0018: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........
0020: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........

The above is the Event that occurs every time the
Power Options is invoked (I think). How do I
find out what it doesn't like about my CRT?

It is now worse than ever, and I suspect why.

I decided to do some Windows Update. Hadn't been there in about
a month. (I prefer Manual....I don't want all the updates, and
for good reason).

I let it install 27 updates, including Windows Search and IE8.

I did a reboot (of course), and some work, and went away,
figuring it would go to hibernate. Instead, 8 hours later,
it had not even gone to Screen Saver!

Looking at Event Viewer, it has 200 events recorded, in the top
two categories.

I'd like to back off and uninstall Windows Search and try again,
if somebody will tell me how to uninstall it. As for IE8, I can
probably download and IE7, uninstall IE8 and reinstall IE7. I
use Firefox as my main browser anyway.

Meanwhile, here is one of the messages in the Event Viewer. Note
that Windows Search was involved.

Event Type: Error
Event Source: Windows Search Service
Event Category: Gatherer
Event ID: 3024
Date: 2/16/2010
Time: 3:29:08 PM
User: N/A
Computer: COMPAQ-2006
Description:
The update cannot be started because the content sources cannot be
accessed. Fix the errors and try the update again.

Context: Windows Application, SystemIndex Catalog


For more information, see Help and Support Center at
http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp.


  #49  
Old February 17th 10, 01:40 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
William B. Lurie
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 811
Default Event viewer

William B. Lurie wrote:
William B. Lurie wrote:
Jose wrote:
On Feb 12, 6:10 am, "William B. Lurie" wrote:
You nice folks led me to Event Viewer not too long ago, and
in studying it, I find under Applications that Automatic Live
Update is being run every 3 hours. It isn't my Norton Anti-
Virus Live Update, and I do not allow Windows Live Update to
run. Or at least I think I have it set so that I run Windows
Update when I choose to do so.

How can I track down what is running so often, and preventing
my system from hibernating as a result?

Thank you.

Provide more information:

Minimize back and forth Q&A and eliminate guesswork and assumptions:

Click Start, Run and in the box enter:

msinfo32

Click OK, and when the System Summary info appears, click Edit, Select
All, Copy and then paste
back here.

There will be some personal information (like System Name and User
Name), and whatever appears to
be private information to you, just delete from the pasted
information.

What are your system settings regarding Hibernation? Mine is set to
hibernate after 30 minutes of inactivity, but I can also hibernate
anytime. Which does not work for you?

Has hibernation ever worked?

If you click Start, Turn Off Computer and press the Shift key, does
the Stand By button turn into a Hibernate button and then if you click
Hibernate does your system enter hibernation?

Let's see this event you see:

Look in the Event Viewer for clues around the time of the incident

Here is a method to post the specific information about individual
events.

To see the Event Viewer logs, click Start, Settings, Control Panel,
Administrative Tools, Event Viewer.

A shortcut to Event Viewer is to click Start, Run and in the box
enter:

%SystemRoot%\system32\eventvwr.msc

Click OK to launch the Event Viewer.

The most interesting logs are usually the Application and System.
Some logs may be almost or completely empty.
Not every event is a problem, some are informational messages that
things are working okay and some are warnings.
No event should defy reasonable explanation.

Each event is sorted by Date and Time. Errors will have red Xs,
Warnings will have yellow !s.
Information messages have white is. Not every Error or Warning event
means there is a serious issue.
Some are excusable at startup time when Windows is booting. Try to
find just the events at the date
and time around your problem.

If you double click an event, it will open a Properties windows with
more information. On the right are
black up and down arrow buttons to scroll through the open events. The
third button that looks like
two pages on top of each other is used to copy the event details to
your Windows clipboard.

When you find an interesting event that occurred around the time of
your issue, click the third button
under the up and down arrows to copy the details and then you can
paste the details (right click, Paste
or CTRL-V) the detail text back here for analysis.

To get a fresh start on any Event Viewer log, you can choose to clear
the log (backing up the log is offered),
then reproduce your issue, then look at just the events around the
time of your issue.


Okay, Jose, one mo' time:

Event Type: Error
Event Source: ati2mtag
Event Category: CRT
Event ID: 45062
Date: 2/16/2010
Time: 1:03:13 PM
User: N/A
Computer: COMPAQ-2006
Description:
CRT invalid display type
Data:
0000: 00 00 00 00 01 00 5a 00 ......Z.
0008: 2c 00 00 00 06 b0 00 c0 ,....°.À
0010: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........
0018: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........
0020: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........

The above is the Event that occurs every time the
Power Options is invoked (I think). How do I
find out what it doesn't like about my CRT?

It is now worse than ever, and I suspect why.

I decided to do some Windows Update. Hadn't been there in about
a month. (I prefer Manual....I don't want all the updates, and
for good reason).

I let it install 27 updates, including Windows Search and IE8.

I did a reboot (of course), and some work, and went away,
figuring it would go to hibernate. Instead, 8 hours later,
it had not even gone to Screen Saver!

Looking at Event Viewer, it has 200 events recorded, in the top
two categories.

I'd like to back off and uninstall Windows Search and try again,
if somebody will tell me how to uninstall it. As for IE8, I can
probably download and IE7, uninstall IE8 and reinstall IE7. I
use Firefox as my main browser anyway.

Meanwhile, here is one of the messages in the Event Viewer. Note
that Windows Search was involved.

Event Type: Error
Event Source: Windows Search Service
Event Category: Gatherer
Event ID: 3024
Date: 2/16/2010
Time: 3:29:08 PM
User: N/A
Computer: COMPAQ-2006
Description:
The update cannot be started because the content sources cannot be
accessed. Fix the errors and try the update again.

Context: Windows Application, SystemIndex Catalog


For more information, see Help and Support Center at
http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp.


and still one more to explain:

Event Type: Error
Event Source: Service Control Manager
Event Category: None
Event ID: 7026
Date: 2/17/2010
Time: 7:54:22 AM
User: N/A
Computer: COMPAQ-2006
Description:
The following boot-start or system-start driver(s) failed to load:
ftsata2
KLIF

For more information, see Help and Support Center at
http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp.

  #50  
Old February 17th 10, 01:40 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
William B. Lurie
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 811
Default Event viewer

William B. Lurie wrote:
William B. Lurie wrote:
Jose wrote:
On Feb 12, 6:10 am, "William B. Lurie" wrote:
You nice folks led me to Event Viewer not too long ago, and
in studying it, I find under Applications that Automatic Live
Update is being run every 3 hours. It isn't my Norton Anti-
Virus Live Update, and I do not allow Windows Live Update to
run. Or at least I think I have it set so that I run Windows
Update when I choose to do so.

How can I track down what is running so often, and preventing
my system from hibernating as a result?

Thank you.

Provide more information:

Minimize back and forth Q&A and eliminate guesswork and assumptions:

Click Start, Run and in the box enter:

msinfo32

Click OK, and when the System Summary info appears, click Edit, Select
All, Copy and then paste
back here.

There will be some personal information (like System Name and User
Name), and whatever appears to
be private information to you, just delete from the pasted
information.

What are your system settings regarding Hibernation? Mine is set to
hibernate after 30 minutes of inactivity, but I can also hibernate
anytime. Which does not work for you?

Has hibernation ever worked?

If you click Start, Turn Off Computer and press the Shift key, does
the Stand By button turn into a Hibernate button and then if you click
Hibernate does your system enter hibernation?

Let's see this event you see:

Look in the Event Viewer for clues around the time of the incident

Here is a method to post the specific information about individual
events.

To see the Event Viewer logs, click Start, Settings, Control Panel,
Administrative Tools, Event Viewer.

A shortcut to Event Viewer is to click Start, Run and in the box
enter:

%SystemRoot%\system32\eventvwr.msc

Click OK to launch the Event Viewer.

The most interesting logs are usually the Application and System.
Some logs may be almost or completely empty.
Not every event is a problem, some are informational messages that
things are working okay and some are warnings.
No event should defy reasonable explanation.

Each event is sorted by Date and Time. Errors will have red Xs,
Warnings will have yellow !s.
Information messages have white is. Not every Error or Warning event
means there is a serious issue.
Some are excusable at startup time when Windows is booting. Try to
find just the events at the date
and time around your problem.

If you double click an event, it will open a Properties windows with
more information. On the right are
black up and down arrow buttons to scroll through the open events. The
third button that looks like
two pages on top of each other is used to copy the event details to
your Windows clipboard.

When you find an interesting event that occurred around the time of
your issue, click the third button
under the up and down arrows to copy the details and then you can
paste the details (right click, Paste
or CTRL-V) the detail text back here for analysis.

To get a fresh start on any Event Viewer log, you can choose to clear
the log (backing up the log is offered),
then reproduce your issue, then look at just the events around the
time of your issue.


Okay, Jose, one mo' time:

Event Type: Error
Event Source: ati2mtag
Event Category: CRT
Event ID: 45062
Date: 2/16/2010
Time: 1:03:13 PM
User: N/A
Computer: COMPAQ-2006
Description:
CRT invalid display type
Data:
0000: 00 00 00 00 01 00 5a 00 ......Z.
0008: 2c 00 00 00 06 b0 00 c0 ,....°.À
0010: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........
0018: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........
0020: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........

The above is the Event that occurs every time the
Power Options is invoked (I think). How do I
find out what it doesn't like about my CRT?

It is now worse than ever, and I suspect why.

I decided to do some Windows Update. Hadn't been there in about
a month. (I prefer Manual....I don't want all the updates, and
for good reason).

I let it install 27 updates, including Windows Search and IE8.

I did a reboot (of course), and some work, and went away,
figuring it would go to hibernate. Instead, 8 hours later,
it had not even gone to Screen Saver!

Looking at Event Viewer, it has 200 events recorded, in the top
two categories.

I'd like to back off and uninstall Windows Search and try again,
if somebody will tell me how to uninstall it. As for IE8, I can
probably download and IE7, uninstall IE8 and reinstall IE7. I
use Firefox as my main browser anyway.

Meanwhile, here is one of the messages in the Event Viewer. Note
that Windows Search was involved.

Event Type: Error
Event Source: Windows Search Service
Event Category: Gatherer
Event ID: 3024
Date: 2/16/2010
Time: 3:29:08 PM
User: N/A
Computer: COMPAQ-2006
Description:
The update cannot be started because the content sources cannot be
accessed. Fix the errors and try the update again.

Context: Windows Application, SystemIndex Catalog


For more information, see Help and Support Center at
http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp.


and still one more to explain:

Event Type: Error
Event Source: Service Control Manager
Event Category: None
Event ID: 7026
Date: 2/17/2010
Time: 7:54:22 AM
User: N/A
Computer: COMPAQ-2006
Description:
The following boot-start or system-start driver(s) failed to load:
ftsata2
KLIF

For more information, see Help and Support Center at
http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp.

  #51  
Old February 18th 10, 12:33 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Jose
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,140
Default Event viewer

On Feb 17, 6:50*am, "William B. Lurie" wrote:
William B. Lurie wrote:
Jose wrote:
On Feb 12, 6:10 am, "William B. Lurie" wrote:
You nice folks led me to Event Viewer not too long ago, and
in studying it, I find under Applications that Automatic Live
Update is being run every 3 hours. It isn't my Norton Anti-
Virus Live Update, and I do not allow Windows Live Update to
run. Or at least I think I have it set so that I run Windows
Update when I choose to do so.


How can I track down what is running so often, and preventing
my system from hibernating as a result?


Thank you.


Provide more information:


Minimize back and forth Q&A and eliminate guesswork and assumptions:


Click Start, Run and in the box enter:


msinfo32


Click OK, and when the System Summary info appears, click Edit, Select
All, Copy and then paste
back here.


There will be some personal information (like System Name and User
Name), and whatever appears to
be private information to you, just delete from the pasted
information.


What are your system settings regarding Hibernation? *Mine is set to
hibernate after 30 minutes of inactivity, but I can also hibernate
anytime. *Which does not work for you?


Has hibernation ever worked?


If you click Start, Turn Off Computer and press the Shift key, does
the Stand By button turn into a Hibernate button and then if you click
Hibernate does your system enter hibernation?


Let's see this event you see:


Look in the Event Viewer for clues around the time of the incident


Here is a method to post the specific information about individual
events.


To see the Event Viewer logs, click Start, Settings, Control Panel,
Administrative Tools, Event Viewer.


A shortcut to Event Viewer is to click Start, Run and in the box
enter:


%SystemRoot%\system32\eventvwr.msc


Click OK to launch the Event Viewer.


The most interesting logs are usually the Application and System.
Some logs may be almost or completely empty.
Not every event is a problem, some are informational messages that
things are working okay and some are warnings.
No event should defy reasonable explanation.


Each event is sorted by Date and Time. *Errors will have red Xs,
Warnings will have yellow !s.
Information messages have white is. *Not every Error or Warning event
means there is a serious issue.
Some are excusable at startup time when Windows is booting. *Try to
find just the events at the date
and time around your problem.


If you double click an event, it will open a Properties windows with
more information. *On the right are
black up and down arrow buttons to scroll through the open events. The
third button that looks like
two pages on top of each other is used to copy the event details to
your Windows clipboard.


When you find an interesting event that occurred around the time of
your issue, click the third button
under the up and down arrows to copy the details and then you can
paste the details (right click, Paste
or CTRL-V) the detail text back here for analysis.


To get a fresh start on any Event Viewer log, you can choose to clear
the log (backing up the log is offered),
then reproduce your issue, then look at just the events around the
time of your issue.


Okay, Jose, one mo' time:


Event Type: * *Error
Event Source: * *ati2mtag
Event Category: * *CRT
Event ID: * *45062
Date: * * * *2/16/2010
Time: * * * *1:03:13 PM
User: * * * *N/A
Computer: * *COMPAQ-2006
Description:
CRT invalid display type
Data:
0000: 00 00 00 00 01 00 5a 00 * ......Z.
0008: 2c 00 00 00 06 b0 00 c0 * ,....°.À
0010: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 * ........
0018: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 * ........
0020: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 * ........


The above is the Event that occurs every time the
Power Options is invoked (I think). How do I
find out what it doesn't like about my CRT?


It is now worse than ever, and I suspect why.

I decided to do some Windows Update. Hadn't been there in about
a month. (I prefer Manual....I don't want all the updates, and
for good reason).

I let it install 27 updates, including Windows Search and IE8.

I did a reboot (of course), and some work, and went away,
figuring it would go to hibernate. Instead, 8 hours later,
it had not even gone to Screen Saver!

Looking at Event Viewer, it has 200 events recorded, in the top
two categories.

I'd like to back off and uninstall Windows Search and try again,
if somebody will tell me how to uninstall it. As for IE8, I can
probably download and IE7, uninstall IE8 and reinstall IE7. I
use Firefox as my main browser anyway.

Meanwhile, here is one of the messages in the Event Viewer. Note
that Windows Search was involved.

Event Type: * * Error
Event Source: * Windows Search Service
Event Category: Gatherer
Event ID: * * * 3024
Date: * * * * * 2/16/2010
Time: * * * * * 3:29:08 PM
User: * * * * * N/A
Computer: * * * COMPAQ-2006
Description:
The update cannot be started because the content sources cannot be
accessed. Fix the errors and try the update again.

Context: Windows Application, SystemIndex Catalog

For more information, see Help and Support Center athttp://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp.


Enough people want to uninstall Windows Search post install (I wonder
why?), so I have copy/paste directions:

After updates, Search Desktop may show up in the Taskbar because
Windows Search has been installed.

You can turn off the Windows Search Deskbar but Windows Search will
still be installed and running. Contrary to some beliefs,turning off
the toolbar is not the same as uninstalling.

Uninstalling Windows Search depends on the version.

Windows Search is Microsoft KB940157.

Windows Search 4.0 can be removed from Add or Remove Programs. If you
do not see it check the Show updates box and look again.

Version 3.0 did not show up in Add or Remove Programs, but the
uninstall process is the same for both behind the scenes.

KB940157 and every installed KB should have an uninstall folder and
uninstallation process to go with it.

Click Start, Run and in the box enter:

%systemroot%\$NtUninstallKB940157$\spuninst\spunin st.exe

Click OK and the uninstall will run for KB940157. Follow the prompts
and reboot.

You could also navigate to the KB940157 folder and double click the
spuninst.exe to launch it.

Reboot when the uninstall is complete.
  #52  
Old February 18th 10, 12:33 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Jose
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,140
Default Event viewer

On Feb 17, 6:50*am, "William B. Lurie" wrote:
William B. Lurie wrote:
Jose wrote:
On Feb 12, 6:10 am, "William B. Lurie" wrote:
You nice folks led me to Event Viewer not too long ago, and
in studying it, I find under Applications that Automatic Live
Update is being run every 3 hours. It isn't my Norton Anti-
Virus Live Update, and I do not allow Windows Live Update to
run. Or at least I think I have it set so that I run Windows
Update when I choose to do so.


How can I track down what is running so often, and preventing
my system from hibernating as a result?


Thank you.


Provide more information:


Minimize back and forth Q&A and eliminate guesswork and assumptions:


Click Start, Run and in the box enter:


msinfo32


Click OK, and when the System Summary info appears, click Edit, Select
All, Copy and then paste
back here.


There will be some personal information (like System Name and User
Name), and whatever appears to
be private information to you, just delete from the pasted
information.


What are your system settings regarding Hibernation? *Mine is set to
hibernate after 30 minutes of inactivity, but I can also hibernate
anytime. *Which does not work for you?


Has hibernation ever worked?


If you click Start, Turn Off Computer and press the Shift key, does
the Stand By button turn into a Hibernate button and then if you click
Hibernate does your system enter hibernation?


Let's see this event you see:


Look in the Event Viewer for clues around the time of the incident


Here is a method to post the specific information about individual
events.


To see the Event Viewer logs, click Start, Settings, Control Panel,
Administrative Tools, Event Viewer.


A shortcut to Event Viewer is to click Start, Run and in the box
enter:


%SystemRoot%\system32\eventvwr.msc


Click OK to launch the Event Viewer.


The most interesting logs are usually the Application and System.
Some logs may be almost or completely empty.
Not every event is a problem, some are informational messages that
things are working okay and some are warnings.
No event should defy reasonable explanation.


Each event is sorted by Date and Time. *Errors will have red Xs,
Warnings will have yellow !s.
Information messages have white is. *Not every Error or Warning event
means there is a serious issue.
Some are excusable at startup time when Windows is booting. *Try to
find just the events at the date
and time around your problem.


If you double click an event, it will open a Properties windows with
more information. *On the right are
black up and down arrow buttons to scroll through the open events. The
third button that looks like
two pages on top of each other is used to copy the event details to
your Windows clipboard.


When you find an interesting event that occurred around the time of
your issue, click the third button
under the up and down arrows to copy the details and then you can
paste the details (right click, Paste
or CTRL-V) the detail text back here for analysis.


To get a fresh start on any Event Viewer log, you can choose to clear
the log (backing up the log is offered),
then reproduce your issue, then look at just the events around the
time of your issue.


Okay, Jose, one mo' time:


Event Type: * *Error
Event Source: * *ati2mtag
Event Category: * *CRT
Event ID: * *45062
Date: * * * *2/16/2010
Time: * * * *1:03:13 PM
User: * * * *N/A
Computer: * *COMPAQ-2006
Description:
CRT invalid display type
Data:
0000: 00 00 00 00 01 00 5a 00 * ......Z.
0008: 2c 00 00 00 06 b0 00 c0 * ,....°.À
0010: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 * ........
0018: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 * ........
0020: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 * ........


The above is the Event that occurs every time the
Power Options is invoked (I think). How do I
find out what it doesn't like about my CRT?


It is now worse than ever, and I suspect why.

I decided to do some Windows Update. Hadn't been there in about
a month. (I prefer Manual....I don't want all the updates, and
for good reason).

I let it install 27 updates, including Windows Search and IE8.

I did a reboot (of course), and some work, and went away,
figuring it would go to hibernate. Instead, 8 hours later,
it had not even gone to Screen Saver!

Looking at Event Viewer, it has 200 events recorded, in the top
two categories.

I'd like to back off and uninstall Windows Search and try again,
if somebody will tell me how to uninstall it. As for IE8, I can
probably download and IE7, uninstall IE8 and reinstall IE7. I
use Firefox as my main browser anyway.

Meanwhile, here is one of the messages in the Event Viewer. Note
that Windows Search was involved.

Event Type: * * Error
Event Source: * Windows Search Service
Event Category: Gatherer
Event ID: * * * 3024
Date: * * * * * 2/16/2010
Time: * * * * * 3:29:08 PM
User: * * * * * N/A
Computer: * * * COMPAQ-2006
Description:
The update cannot be started because the content sources cannot be
accessed. Fix the errors and try the update again.

Context: Windows Application, SystemIndex Catalog

For more information, see Help and Support Center athttp://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp.


Enough people want to uninstall Windows Search post install (I wonder
why?), so I have copy/paste directions:

After updates, Search Desktop may show up in the Taskbar because
Windows Search has been installed.

You can turn off the Windows Search Deskbar but Windows Search will
still be installed and running. Contrary to some beliefs,turning off
the toolbar is not the same as uninstalling.

Uninstalling Windows Search depends on the version.

Windows Search is Microsoft KB940157.

Windows Search 4.0 can be removed from Add or Remove Programs. If you
do not see it check the Show updates box and look again.

Version 3.0 did not show up in Add or Remove Programs, but the
uninstall process is the same for both behind the scenes.

KB940157 and every installed KB should have an uninstall folder and
uninstallation process to go with it.

Click Start, Run and in the box enter:

%systemroot%\$NtUninstallKB940157$\spuninst\spunin st.exe

Click OK and the uninstall will run for KB940157. Follow the prompts
and reboot.

You could also navigate to the KB940157 folder and double click the
spuninst.exe to launch it.

Reboot when the uninstall is complete.
 




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