Fixing Blue Screen of Death (BSOD): Step-by-Step Troubleshooting
A BSOD indicates a critical system crash caused by drivers, hardware, or system files.
A BSOD indicates a critical system crash caused by drivers, hardware, or system files.
A bootable USB installer is required to install Windows, repair startup issues, or recover a system that won’t boot.
Corrupted Windows system files can cause crashes, update failures, and slow performance.
Windows Update may fail with error codes, preventing important updates from installing.
Desktop icons may vanish or reset after restart or screen changes.
Forgetting a Windows password can block access to your PC.
Wi-Fi may connect and disconnect repeatedly, causing dropped calls, slow browsing, or loss of internet access.
A printer may appear “Offline” even when powered on and connected.
Audio output or microphone input may stop functioning in apps or system-wide.
Low disk space can slow performance and block updates.