ok, something modified a critical windows data structure, windows detected it and shutddown.
this can be cause by hardware, malware, or software driver bugs.
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you have WPRO_41_2001.sys installed
\SystemRoot\system32\drivers\WPRO_41_2001.sys Mon Nov 07 13:04:48 2011
most often it is used for packet modification for game cheating but sometimes indicates that malware is scanning packets on your system. Just make sure you know about it and want it.
so: i would do:
- a malwarebytes scan (i don't think you have malware)
- run memtest86.exe and confirm your memory is ok (i think it will be ok)
then run verifier.exe and set debugging flags on the third party drivers that you have installed
(I would suspect the cfosspeed6.sys is corrupting memory of other processes)
\SystemRoot\system32\DRIVERS\cfosspeed6.sys Wed May 29 09:47:24 2013
it is used for "packet shaping" or game cheating in MMO's
reboot with the verifier flags set and wait for the next blue screen. if it is a driver making a common mistake, it will bluescreen and name the driver. Best to change your memory dump to a full memory dump or at least a kernel memory dump to allow the proper debugging info to be saved to the memory dump
CobaltFilms :
xcrossroadsx :
The BSOD you got (0xF4) translates to critical_object_termination. This doesn't really tell much other than that some critical object (usually a process/service) has stopped responding/was killed, which in this case is NTOSKRNL.exe (this is the kernel executable for an NT OS). What we have to do is figure out what is the kernel executable to crash, normally a bad driver or piece of AV or similar software that uses kernel mode drivers. I am using windbg to look at the BSOD now, give me a few moments to get back to you.
Updates so far: Windbg is saying that the BSOD was probably caused by wininit.exe. Weird, since you are pointing out NTOSKRNL.exe.
So, after a bit more deliberation, it appears that some driver is causing the issue. Did you recently install or update any new hardware or software that uses drivers (such as anti virus software, disk management software, etc) by any chance?
Sorry for the late response..
Anyways, I don't believe so.. I can't really remember installing any drivers before the blue screen started. Should I update drivers that need updating?
Generally the only driver I can recall updating is my GPU with GeForce Expierience.
EDIT: Could it be this driver I installed? The blue screens started around 3-4 days after I installed it.
http://gyazo.com/9d3429fba0fdb8f234e0e6c7254dbacd