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My Dell laptop seems to be in a state of continuous BSOD where it restarts, stays normal for about 5 minutes and then immediately BSODs again. It's a cycle.

The error says SYSTEM SERVICE ERROR 

Help pls

It's running Windows 10 and has i5 10350G1 in it on UHD.

I've tried updating the drivers and windows 10 already

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https://linustechtips.com/topic/1355711-repeated-bsod-error-pls-help/
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10 minutes ago, Sriyashas said:

Now it seems to have stopped BSODing and just does this.

@RONOTHAN##

 

Most of what I'm seeing says it's a Windows 10 issue, meaning something in your Windows install is corrupted. It is worth running something like Memtest and checking health of everything in an Ubuntu (or some other Linux distro) live USB, but otherwise use that Live USB to save all of your important data from the Hard drive and re install Windows (your activation key will be tied to the hardware, so you won't need to buy a new product key)

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6 hours ago, RONOTHAN## said:

Most of what I'm seeing says it's a Windows 10 issue, meaning something in your Windows install is corrupted. It is worth running something like Memtest and checking health of everything in an Ubuntu (or some other Linux distro) live USB, but otherwise use that Live USB to save all of your important data from the Hard drive and re install Windows (your activation key will be tied to the hardware, so you won't need to buy a new product key)

How do I create a live USB on Linux.

Sorry if I'm sounding stupid. I don't use Linux(or live USB's for that matter)

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5 hours ago, Sriyashas said:

How do I create a live USB on Linux.

Sorry if I'm sounding stupid. I don't use Linux(or live USB's for that matter)

Download the ISO from Ubuntu/manjaro/whatever and download Rufus. Use Rufus to put the ISO on the USB drive, and boot into the USB. When it brings up the installer, either close it or hit "try it first" or something along those lines (I forget the exact wording). You can use the distro like it was installed on the computer, including downloading programs that you can use to check the health of the drive and such. Also, depending on the distro of choice, you may need to disable secure boot in the bios (I know pop os requires it, not sure about manjaro or others) 

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