It was working perfectly fine until i plugged in a usb Ihome mouse model #IH-M108OB. As soon as I plugged in the mouse, my screen went blue and the system rebooted. I unplugged the device and found out it was noncompatible with windows 7.
Ihome Mouse Driver Windows 7
- When you find the program iHome Mouse Driver, click it, and then do one of the following: Windows Vista/7/8: Click Uninstall. Windows XP: Click the Remove or Change/Remove tab (to the right of the program).
- Ihome wireless mouse driver free download - 802.11g Wireless Lan Driver 10.1.0.11.zip, 802.11b+g Atheros Wireless Lan Driver 7.1.0.90.zip, Wireless Wizard, and many more programs.
- Ihome mouse driver free download - Microsoft IntelliPoint Driver (32-bit), Microsoft IntelliPoint Driver (64-bit), USB MouseMaestro Mouse Filter Driver (Windows XP), and many more programs.
- Ihome wireless mouse driver free download - 802.11g Wireless Lan Driver 10.1.0.11.zip, 802.11b+g Atheros Wireless Lan Driver 7.1.0.90.zip, Wireless Wizard, and many more programs.
Ihome Mouse Download
Thanks!
I looked at about half of the dump files, and none of them pointed at the file causing the problem.
It looks like you can probably make this happen on demand. Is that correct?
I think there's a bad driver here. I think one way we might be able to track this down is if you enable a testing tool called Driver Verifier on your machine.
If this tool finds a problem, your machine will crash again.
Enable driver verifier
1) Open an elevated command prompt
2) Type 'verifier /standard /all' (no quotes)
3) Reboot your machine
4) Use machine again until it crashes (hopefully this will be fast :)
After the crash & reboot, go into safe mode. http://windowshelp.microsoft.com/Windows/en-US/Help/323ef48f-7b93-4079-a48a-5c58eec904a11033.mspx
Disable driver verifier
1) Open an elevated command prompt
2) Type 'verifier /reset' (no quotes)
3) Reboot your machine
Then post the dump to your skydrive folder. Want to know if your current hardware & software will work with Windows 7? Check out these links: **Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor ** **Windows 7 Compatibility Center**
I looked at about half of the dump files, and none of them pointed at the file causing the problem.
It looks like you can probably make this happen on demand. Is that correct?
I think there's a bad driver here. I think one way we might be able to track this down is if you enable a testing tool called Driver Verifier on your machine.
If this tool finds a problem, your machine will crash again.
Enable driver verifier
1) Open an elevated command prompt
2) Type 'verifier /standard /all' (no quotes)
3) Reboot your machine
4) Use machine again until it crashes (hopefully this will be fast :)
After the crash & reboot, go into safe mode. http://windowshelp.microsoft.com/Windows/en-US/Help/323ef48f-7b93-4079-a48a-5c58eec904a11033.mspx
Disable driver verifier
1) Open an elevated command prompt
2) Type 'verifier /reset' (no quotes)
3) Reboot your machine
Then post the dump to your skydrive folder. Want to know if your current hardware & software will work with Windows 7? Check out these links: **Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor ** **Windows 7 Compatibility Center**