1. What operating system?
2. Is the OS install fresh, or are you using a drive that already had Windows on it?
3. Do the problems occur when you boot into safe mode?
DMR
Wombat At Large
7,229 posts since Dec 2003
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If you mean that Windows was already installed on the HDD, then the HDD was installed in the system, then that's the wrong way around to do things. Format and install again if that's the case. Windows XP does NOT handle motherboard change at all well!
Catweazle
Grandad
4,335 posts since Mar 2004
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Step 1: Check for hardware issues such as overheating (fans not working, heatsinks not attached firmly etc) or cards/RAM etc not firmly seated in their slots.
Also if you have more than 1 RAM module, especially if they are different brands, try using one at a time in Slot 1 to check if you have RAM incompatibilities.
Step 2: There's an almost infinite number of possibilities why your system could be acting like this, especially if you've installed everything at once.
Strip your system back to a 'bare-bones' system, with just your RAM, display card, hard drive and primary optical drive installed, and all onboard devices disabled in BIOS. Do a clean install of Windows.
Add your devices one by one, creating a System Restore checkpoint before each addition, and installing them correctly. This includes enabling your onboard devices. Check for stability after each addition.
Add your software programs one by one, again creating a checkpoint before each addition, and testing for stability before proceeding to the next.
Following that process will enable you to identify where the problem is coming from.
Catweazle
Grandad
4,335 posts since Mar 2004
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You're still not being clear with the info asked for, I'm afraid.
Did you install Windows XP on the hard drive before connecting the Hard drive to the mew motherboard? If so, this is the incorrect order of procedure. Windows XP should be installed to the hard drive AFTER it is fitted to the new motherboard. A motherboard change is seen by XP as 'being changed to a new system', and you run a high risk of things not working correctly, or even Windows refusing to boot.
If your display card is 'backwards compatible' then there should be no problems. Most AGP 8x cards are backwards compatible with AGP 4x, 1.5 volts.
I'm sorry, but I'm unaware what the Intel utility is reporting, I'm afraid.
Catweazle
Grandad
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