Ok, except this bootup screen is not a part of Windows it is a part of the system BIOS. Most likely caused by a motherboard going bad.
DES May 20th
No, it’s part of Windows.
dan May 21st
well, actually this is a windows boot up menu, given after a false shutdown. the other fail within, is the misspelling of “windows” “normally” and “choose” just to name a few. the question at hand for me is where was THIS demonstration of fail
1309 May 24th
bad video card memory, usually.
GTD May 27th
Not bad video card, bad/corrupt hard drive more likely. Bad video card wouldn’t swap characters, it would scramble the whole screen.
Dan June 24th
It is not an US copy of windows. All of you are idiots.
King Liaf July 9th
Windows: ERROR by default.
Festisio September 2nd
foos, the character mapping got corrupted.. I’ve seen this many times
Daniel September 16th
I’ve seen this once a week at work. We have HPs with defective memory clips. Nothing is broken, and taking the RAM stick(s) out and putting it in (sometimes in another slot) fixes the problem.
Jay April 20th
Yeah, Video card memory wouldn’t do this.
it is either damaged RAM (storing the byte values of the letters incorrectly) or a really lame edit.
Bob May 20th
Ok, except this bootup screen is not a part of Windows it is a part of the system BIOS. Most likely caused by a motherboard going bad.
DES May 20th
No, it’s part of Windows.
dan May 21st
well, actually this is a windows boot up menu, given after a false shutdown. the other fail within, is the misspelling of “windows” “normally” and “choose” just to name a few. the question at hand for me is where was THIS demonstration of fail
1309 May 24th
bad video card memory, usually.
GTD May 27th
Not bad video card, bad/corrupt hard drive more likely. Bad video card wouldn’t swap characters, it would scramble the whole screen.
Dan June 24th
It is not an US copy of windows. All of you are idiots.
King Liaf July 9th
Windows: ERROR by default.
Festisio September 2nd
foos, the character mapping got corrupted.. I’ve seen this many times
Daniel September 16th
I’ve seen this once a week at work. We have HPs with defective memory clips. Nothing is broken, and taking the RAM stick(s) out and putting it in (sometimes in another slot) fixes the problem.
Jay April 20th
Yeah, Video card memory wouldn’t do this.
it is either damaged RAM (storing the byte values of the letters incorrectly) or a really lame edit.
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