unfunny New member Joined May 3, 2021 Posts 4 May 3, 2021 #1 i noticed that after starting up my laptop, my computer felt laggier and felt different. I went into device manager and noticed that my Intel(R) Graphics 630 device was bad, so I thought I just had to update the drivers, but after I tried to, it said that my configuration registry database is corrupt. I found a similar thread here that was already solved and I had the same problem as him, but our graphics are different, that user had 620, mine is 630. I have an ASUS ROG GU501GM running Windows 10 64bit. Can anyone help me out? Thanks. Last edited: May 3, 2021
i noticed that after starting up my laptop, my computer felt laggier and felt different. I went into device manager and noticed that my Intel(R) Graphics 630 device was bad, so I thought I just had to update the drivers, but after I tried to, it said that my configuration registry database is corrupt. I found a similar thread here that was already solved and I had the same problem as him, but our graphics are different, that user had 620, mine is 630. I have an ASUS ROG GU501GM running Windows 10 64bit. Can anyone help me out? Thanks.
bruce1270 Moderator, Windows Update Analyst, Security Analyst Staff member Joined Nov 22, 2017 Posts 2,458 May 5, 2021 #2 Hi Welcome to sysnative Please do the following. Upload Drivers Hive Navigate to C:\Windows\System32\config Right-click on the current DRIVERS file and select copy Note: If you get an error that the file is in use, reboot your computer and then try again. Right-click on your Desktop and select paste Right-click on the DRIVERS file on your Desktop and select Send To -> Compressed (zipped) Folder Upload the zip from your Desktop to a file sharing service such as Dropbox or OneDrive or SendSpace and include the link with your reply.
Hi Welcome to sysnative Please do the following. Upload Drivers Hive Navigate to C:\Windows\System32\config Right-click on the current DRIVERS file and select copy Note: If you get an error that the file is in use, reboot your computer and then try again. Right-click on your Desktop and select paste Right-click on the DRIVERS file on your Desktop and select Send To -> Compressed (zipped) Folder Upload the zip from your Desktop to a file sharing service such as Dropbox or OneDrive or SendSpace and include the link with your reply.
unfunny New member Joined May 3, 2021 Posts 4 May 6, 2021 #3 Thanks for the reply! Here is the link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1BydJO5wvMBFMxwmp45pzQU1JWL7wzw2C/view?usp=sharing
Thanks for the reply! Here is the link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1BydJO5wvMBFMxwmp45pzQU1JWL7wzw2C/view?usp=sharing
bruce1270 Moderator, Windows Update Analyst, Security Analyst Staff member Joined Nov 22, 2017 Posts 2,458 May 6, 2021 #4 Hi Please do the following. Step#1 - FRST Scan 1. Please download Farbar Recovery Scan Tool and save it to your Desktop. Note: You need to run the 64-bit Version so please ensure you download that one. 2. Right-click FRST64.exe and click Run as Administrator to run it as administrator. When the tool opens, click Yes to disclaimer. 3. Please ensure you place a check mark in the Addition.txt check box at the bottom of the form before running (if not already checked). 4. Press Scan button. 5. It will produce a log called FRST.txt in the same directory the tool is run from (which should now be the desktop) 6. Please attach the log back here. 7. Another log (Addition.txt - also located in the same directory as FRST64.exe) will be generated Please also attach that along with the FRST.txt in your reply.
Hi Please do the following. Step#1 - FRST Scan 1. Please download Farbar Recovery Scan Tool and save it to your Desktop. Note: You need to run the 64-bit Version so please ensure you download that one. 2. Right-click FRST64.exe and click Run as Administrator to run it as administrator. When the tool opens, click Yes to disclaimer. 3. Please ensure you place a check mark in the Addition.txt check box at the bottom of the form before running (if not already checked). 4. Press Scan button. 5. It will produce a log called FRST.txt in the same directory the tool is run from (which should now be the desktop) 6. Please attach the log back here. 7. Another log (Addition.txt - also located in the same directory as FRST64.exe) will be generated Please also attach that along with the FRST.txt in your reply.
unfunny New member Joined May 3, 2021 Posts 4 May 6, 2021 #5 Alright, I attached them. Thanks again. Attachments Addition.txt 104.1 KB · Views: 1 FRST.txt 64.2 KB · Views: 3
bruce1270 Moderator, Windows Update Analyst, Security Analyst Staff member Joined Nov 22, 2017 Posts 2,458 May 8, 2021 #6 Hi Please do the following. Step 1 - Replace Drivers Hive Manually Warning: this fix is specific to the user in this thread. No one else should follow these instructions as it may cause more harm than good. If you are after assistance, please start a thread of your own. Download DRIVERS.ZIP and save to your desktop. Right-click on it and select Extract all.... Make sure the "Show extracted files when complete" is checked and click Extract. Now we have the DRIVERS file that we will be using to replace your current one. Navigate to C:\Windows\System32\config Right-click on the current DRIVERS file and select rename. Rename it to DRIVERS.bad. Note: If you get an error that the file is in use, reboot your computer and then try again. Take the file from the Drivers folder on your desktop and paste it into C:\Windows\System32\config then try updating again. Attachments DRIVERS.zip 654.7 KB · Views: 4
Hi Please do the following. Step 1 - Replace Drivers Hive Manually Warning: this fix is specific to the user in this thread. No one else should follow these instructions as it may cause more harm than good. If you are after assistance, please start a thread of your own. Download DRIVERS.ZIP and save to your desktop. Right-click on it and select Extract all.... Make sure the "Show extracted files when complete" is checked and click Extract. Now we have the DRIVERS file that we will be using to replace your current one. Navigate to C:\Windows\System32\config Right-click on the current DRIVERS file and select rename. Rename it to DRIVERS.bad. Note: If you get an error that the file is in use, reboot your computer and then try again. Take the file from the Drivers folder on your desktop and paste it into C:\Windows\System32\config then try updating again.
unfunny New member Joined May 3, 2021 Posts 4 May 8, 2021 #7 THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I CANNOT EXPRESS MY HAPPINESS THANK YOU