That leaves me with six processes active in startup: Which items should I disable in startup ? All of them?
#Driver power state failure hp driver#
Possibly this problem is caused by another driver that cannot be identified at this time. The crash took place in the Windows kernel. This appears to be a typical software driver bug and is not likely to be caused by a hardware problem. This was probably caused by the following module: ntkrnlmp.exe (nt!KeBugCheckEx+0x0)īugcheck code: 0x9F (0x4, 0x12C, 0xFFFFE002025F4240, 0xFFFFF8012446E8B0)īug check description: This bug check indicates that the driver is in an inconsistent or invalid power state. On Tue 21:51:48 GMT your computer crashedĬrash dump file: C:\WINDOWS\Minidump\061416-9328-01.dmp Lastly, not sure if this adds anything to the attached file, but I ran WhoCrashed and here is a summary of the last crash: All Windows updates are installed.įor all of these crashes, when I restart my computer the restart hangs and takes about five minutes to complete. I did not have any external devices attached today, nor do the crashes seem to be related to external devices. In this last instance, I was uninstalling TechSmith Snagit 12 but the uninstall hung. These crashes do not result in visible BSODs rather, processes stop working correctly so I end up restarting my computer. (I changed the settings in CCleaner which wiped most of my minidump data). Every c ouple of days my Surface Pro 4, ( 6th Gen Intel Core i7, 512GB SSD, 16GB RAM) crashes due to a Driver_Power_State_Failure.