ubuysa
The BSOD Doctor
I've been following this thread with some interest, I really think that your only sensible course of action now is to do a clean re-install of Windows and the PCS drivers as I suggested in a previous post (#7). I think your system is in an unknown state now and any further attempts to clean or fix it are likely to be fruitless.
The Stop code you reported is the same one as was in your first post. 101 (0x65) is rare, it's a Memory_Initialization_Failed error, so perhaps it might be worth checking your RAM just in case that's the problem? Download Memtest, extract the ISO file from the archive, burn the ISO to a CD and then boot from that CD. Memtest will start running. Let it run overnight (you want as many iterations of the test as you can get) and if there are any errors reported in the morning test each RAM card separately.
BTW. Registry cleaners are little more than snake-oil, I can't remember ever seeing a problem that was caused by old or redundant registry entries, but I've seen many caused by cleaning the wrong things. I never run them.
The Stop code you reported is the same one as was in your first post. 101 (0x65) is rare, it's a Memory_Initialization_Failed error, so perhaps it might be worth checking your RAM just in case that's the problem? Download Memtest, extract the ISO file from the archive, burn the ISO to a CD and then boot from that CD. Memtest will start running. Let it run overnight (you want as many iterations of the test as you can get) and if there are any errors reported in the morning test each RAM card separately.
BTW. Registry cleaners are little more than snake-oil, I can't remember ever seeing a problem that was caused by old or redundant registry entries, but I've seen many caused by cleaning the wrong things. I never run them.