Problem Background: A colleague tried to upgrade Win XP system, and the black screen crashed during the installation process, which caused the upgrade to fail.
Analytical solution: The friend's old machine has been installed with Win98/Me/2000, the system can run normally, and the hardware should be no problem. But considering the hardware requirements of the Win XP system is more demanding, first look at the configuration of the old machine: the motherboard of the SiS530 integrated sound card graphics card purchased in 2000, AMD K6-2 500MHz CPU, 2 PC-100 128MB memory, ST 10GB hard drive. According to Microsoft's officially announced minimum hardware configuration for installing Win XP system, the hardware of this machine basically meets the requirements. Then re-partition, format, take out the Win XP installation disk to start the installation. A copy of the system file was successfully completed after two reboots. However, on the last reboot, the system crashed after running to the splash screen. At this point, the system upgrade failed. Switch to another Win XP installation disk, the fault remains. Copying the contents of the installation CD to the hard disk and executing the hard disk installation program is still unsuccessful. Colleagues were originally configured as a single 128MB memory, and then added a 128MB memory of the same brand to improve the running speed. Is this the accident of the memory installed later? Unplug the new memory module and the test results have not changed. After trying to upgrade the motherboard driver, it still did not solve the problem.
The upgrade is in a deadlock. After a friend pointed out: the installation of Win XP requires a higher system configuration, and it is not compatible with some old hardware and software. If the old machine upgrade Win XP is not successful, try to refresh the motherboard BIOS for better hardware support and compatibility. I just got a life-saving straw and immediately downloaded the latest motherboard BIOS file online. Brush in the new BiOS program, reinstall Win XP, and troubleshoot.
Summary: The old machine upgrade Win XP system is often a lot of trouble. The motherboard BIOS as the most basic input and output system is the lowest level of hardware. If your old machine encounters the above problems when upgrading the system, you may try to refresh the motherboard BiOS program to get more new hardware or software support.
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