The only reason I'm asking is that if I try to play a game on the first boot of the day, I can play for about 5 minutes, then I'll start getting a warning something is going very wrong. My lighted USB keyboard will start intermittently flashing the LED's, which will increase in frequency if I keep on playing. If I don't bail out of the game when this happens and keep forging ahead, I'll eventually get a BSOD. Once I quit, the flashing will ramp down, stabilize out and quit. After this happened twice, I haven't wanted to BSOD again just to get the darn error log (I know, I should have written it down). I just do my workaround of rebooting before playing a game now. I have a clean install of Windows 7 Premium 64 bit and the computer is nearly a year old. No extra crapware from any computer maker and I'm only running Microsoft Security Essentials for A/V.
Now if I use the computer for a short while, like surf the net and check email, then do a reboot, I can play any game, any DX version, any age, without a hitch, every time. The CPU and GPU's are not getting hot. In fact, my CPU (a i7 960 3.2 GHz) doesn't even break a sweat under the most demanding game I own right now. I can get the EVGA 480 GPU up to 80 C though. The only add-on programs that are not OS-based tasks running in the background are the EVGA Precision program to run my GPU fan and the MSE A/V program. I have Core Temp, but I don't run that during a game. I'm beginning to wonder if there is a memory problem that goes away after the machine warms up a little. If it's some scheduled task that kicks off, I'd like to find out what it is and turn it the heck off. I definitely turned off scheduled defrags and Windows Auto Update, so they aren't starting in the background.
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