For perspectives, lets say 144 pinout or 1060 pinout with perhaps 300, 000 to 60 billion internal transistors. then there are those with perhaps a few 100K. Try for example 21 billion transistors in a given chip and even more. The GPU chip and a socket array are beyond most of our comprehension. To answer this question, requires a thousand and 52 answers. My wife complained of the white screen pandemic. I have a 1985 Panasonic Microwave which still beats the top of the line today. It has been around and only because I take care of things. My wife’s laptop, Toshiba, Satellite, 17in, 元55-S7902, purchased in 2008. I am sure there are those like me who can say the same. I am of age enough with experience to comprehend manufacturing cause I have done so and been there. I have read most of the Pot-Luck answers which probably determine their answer by lookups and generalizations. Questions are based on interpretations and written to convey a vague understanding. Regarding White Screens? There can only be an answer that has understanding of the question. Anyway, summary:Sorry for this story I’ve presented but I think it is necessary for all of you who would like to fathom what it is we do in technology.
Not really sure how to go about getting the word out on this (or how to edit the post title to indicate it's been resolved), but it appears to be an error caused by running any program with some form of in-game overlay (Obvious exception being steam). The moment I closed down this program the game worked perfectly. Now, I don't have mumble, however, I found that a default program installed with my graphics card - GIGABYTE OC GURU ii had a background overlay option. QUOTE (nacrus Nov 17 2012, 06:35 PM) Second Edit:
Ok, I just fixed it, was reading other posts in the forum and came across this: Thanks for the suggestion, though.įaulting application start time: 0x01cdc121f86715f2 Just reinstalled all the libraries, unfortunately didn't work - still crashes and gives the faulting module as Update.dll. QUOTE (METROID Nov 12 2012, 01:44 PM) Try to reinstall MICROSOFT VISUAL C++ RUNTIME LIBRARIES 2005/2008. Report Id: 1f9f8156-2ce8-11e2-bdf6-bc5ff4580dbeĪnyway, I'm out of ideas one what could be wrong and was wondering if anyone had any suggestions on how to fix this? Thanks in advance for any help! QUOTE Faulting application name: ns2.exe, version: 0.0.0.0, time stamp: 0x5092fe93įaulting module name: Update.dll, version: 0.0.0.0, time stamp: 0x4e29bf2dįaulting application start time: 0x01cdc0f4e1085c4dįaulting application path: C:\Program Files (x86)\Steam\steamapps\common\Natural Selection 2\ns2.exeįaulting module path: C:\Program Files (x86)\Steam\steamapps\common\Natural Selection 2\Update.dll Record Device: Microphone (2- USB Audio Device) Sound Device: Speakers (Realtek High Definition Audio) stereo
I've also tried the suggested fixes from the stickies.Ĭomputer is less than a month old so all drivers are up to date (have updated them since while trying to fix the issue). Running the game as administrator.Running the game from the Launchpad.Updating my drivers.Completely removing and reinstalling the game several times.Installing the game on a separate PC, running it, backing it up through steam onto a USB stick, then installing on my computer.Verified the integrity of the game cache.Reinstlled Visual C++ Runtime Libraries.Using a copy of Update.dll from a working version of NS2. Whenever I run the game, the screen goes black as if it's about to load, but then the game crashes. If your game crashes on startup, try closing any programs that provide an in-game overlay - Including GPU tweakers. Not really sure how to go about getting the word out on this, but it appears to be an error caused by running any program with some form of in-game overlay (Obvious exception being steam).
If that is disabled, I can reliably start NS2. It seems that the graphics overlay plugin for Mumble is actually what is crashing Natural Selection 2. QUOTE Ok, I just fixed it, was reading other posts in the forum and came across this: