Dell Latitude E7440
NTOSKRNL = windows kernel. It handles all driver requests, power management, and memory management. It sits between Hardware and Applications. It got blamed but its not the cause
File: 052124-7812-01.dmp (May 22 2024 - 07:57:25)
BugCheck: [
MEMORY_MANAGEMENT (1A)]
Probably caused by: memory_corruption (Process:
backgroundTaskHost.exe)
Uptime: 1 Day(s), 2 Hour(s), 29 Min(s), and 46 Sec(s)
File: 050924-10859-01.dmp (May 10 2024 - 02:28:22)
BugCheck: [
MEMORY_MANAGEMENT (1A)]
Probably caused by: memory_corruption (Process:
MsMpEng.exe)
Uptime: 0 Day(s), 20 Hour(s), 06 Min(s), and 46 Sec(s)
File: 050324-10078-01.dmp (May 3 2024 - 16:29:42)
BugCheck: [
DRIVER_POWER_STATE_FAILURE (9F)]
Probably caused by: memory_corruption (Process:
System)
Uptime: 0 Day(s), 8 Hour(s), 53 Min(s), and 25 Sec(s)
File: 042924-8937-01.dmp (Apr 29 2024 - 18:33:10)
BugCheck: [
DRIVER_POWER_STATE_FAILURE (9F)]
Probably caused by: memory_corruption (Process:
System)
Uptime: 0 Day(s), 14 Hour(s), 19 Min(s), and 07 Sec(s)
File: 042024-13171-01.dmp (Apr 21 2024 - 06:50:23)
BugCheck: [
FAULTY_HARDWARE_CORRUPTED_PAGE (12B)]
Probably caused by: memory_corruption (Process:
MemCompression)
Uptime: 6 Day(s), 15 Hour(s), 01 Min(s), and 32 Sec(s)
The Driver power state failure BSOD caused by display drivers.
Not exactly new
although with the other 3, the Intel drivers might be victims themselves.
Windows sees two things as memory... RAM and Page File. Page file is on C drive
Try running
memtest86 on each of your ram sticks, one stick at a time, up to 4 passes. Only error count you want is 0, any higher could be cause of the BSOD. Remove/replace ram sticks with errors. Memtest is created as a bootable USB so that you don’t need windows to run it
check ram first
Does that have a hdd or ssd?