Hello ALL!
I just have a suggestion or two to make as to why Win2k Pro locks up, being that I too have experienced this problem. It is a problem in WinXP Pro, too, and I am not sure with the Home Edition of XP.
First, I must point you to the ACPI feature of newer motherboards. If left to itself, the ACPI feature in Win2k Pro, and XP Pro will throw your PCI devices onto IRQ 9, and this includes your AGP, PCI Slots, USB, and Onboard Sound. Why Micro"crash" did not recognize this and fix it immediately (and to this day it is not fixed!) is beyond understanding. Microcrash had this suggestion to offer : In Win2k and XP Pro you must press F5 during the install when you first boot from the CD, with a Black Screen with something like "Checking your system configuration" in the upper left of the screem will be seen. This is when you hit the F5 key. What will this do? It will give you the choice of what type of machine you are installing, like an ACPI system, UniProcessor or MultiProcessor System, and so on. CHOOSE the "Standard PC" selection and continue with the install. I have yet to have a lock up when doing this during my initial install. I found this info on Micro"crashes" website doing a search for ACPI and Win2k. I have noticed on XP Pro that I could go to the Device Manager and go to the "Computer" entry and if it said something with ACPI in it, I could open the properties up on it, go to the drivers tab, and choose re-install, which would allow me to select the location instead of the automatic selection. I then would choose the Display list selection and then, if the Standard PC was not listed in the "Show Compatible Hardware" box, I would choose show all hardware. After the change was made, and I re-booted teh machine, it would re-install all the devices which was thrown onto IRQ 9. Try it on Win2k, to see if it works before you dump your drive to re-install!
Secondly, Those of us with VIA chipsets and DDR ram must by now have realized a serious problem with the BSOD or just blackouts or lockups when playing a game. This is caused by a RAM setting in your BIOS. I turned down my RAM settings, NOT in the DDR section, for it is best to leave those set to auto, BUT rather in the SDRAM settings. I also found that I HAD to change my system performance from "Turbo" to "Normal." After these changes, I am running without any problems! Of all things...Even Windows Me runs great now! I have a 1.4GHz 266FSB Athlon on an ASUS A7M266 MB with 266MB of DDR RAM and a GeForce 2 MX 400 64MB graphics card. It does not matter if you have a Radeon or an Nvidia card, these settings are what helped me. I found this info out at
in their "Staying out of the loop" article. I hope this helps you all out of the lockups.
TeknoGuru