From what I understand the problem is with a driver update Microsoft fouled up. The problem didn't exist when my Toshiba laptop was new but after a few months of automatically letting Microsoft mangle my machine with updates, the problem suddenly appeared. I just thought I would post what I have tried to fix this very frustrating problem. VLC Player has chunks of the 圆4 Flash Player inside itself, (which chunks could possibly be the pieces that are incompatible with the ATI Radeon HD drivers). This could be because VLC either uses the local (OS's) Flash Player's libraries to play flv movies, OR: VLC player also crashes when using it to watch. I only use Chrome now because it has the 32 bit implementation of Flash Player.
I can't find a permanent solution tho this daunting problem, but i have a workaround:
The above are excerpts from a program that analyzes minidumps, called WhoCrashed (free). Product: Microsoft® Windows® Operating System This was probably caused by the following module: watchdog.sys (watchdog+0x122F)īugcheck code: 0x119 (0x1, 0x498CC, 0x49CF2, 0x49CF1)įile path: C:\Windows\system32\drivers\watchdog.sys
This was probably caused by the following module: atikmpag.sys (atikmpag+0圆DCC)īugcheck code: 0x116 (0xFFFFFA800AFCC010, 0xFFFFF88005806DCC, 0x0, 0xD)įile path: C:\Windows\system32\drivers\atikmpag.sysĭescription: AMD multi-vendor Miniport Driver
Windows does give me the following date for the driver: 27th of September 2012įrom what i understand, the BSODs that are caused by the conflict between Flash 圆4 and the ATI Radeon HD drivers fall into two categories: When i try updating the driver through Windows device manger, Windows says that this is the latest version (i tried doing this on 11th of November 2012). My ATI Radeon HD driver is: atiumdag 9.2.0.0 (Catalyst 12.10) / Win7 64 (from GPU-Z). I also understand that Chrome actually updates its own flash player on its own (automatically).įor some reason though, Chrome couldn't pick up that i am using a 64-bit Windows 7, or maybe Chrome doesn't support Flash player 64-bit. Using the same link, through Chrome i got the following:įrom what i understand, Chrome doesn't use the OS's Flash Player, but has its own built in Flash Player.
Remove this driver and install the official driver:Īs far as I know, removing MotioninJoy via add / remover programs uninstall list doesn't work and the driver still remains, so you must uninstall it via the uninstall list, AND THEN navigate to c:\windows\system32\drivers and delete visited using my Firefox and the Flash version that popped there was : 1.5.502.110, for Windows 7 (64-bit).
I've seen MijXfilt.sys tons in the past in cases of analysis. To my knowledge, using this specific driver rather than the official drivers is not recommended. In the *10d dumps, the process at the time of the crash is also very consistent, which is In all of your dumps, it's pointing to the culprit MijXfilt.sys on the stack, etc, which is the MotioninJoy simulate Xbox 360 controller (virtual Xinput device) driver: The Kernel-Mode Driver Framework was notified that Windows detected an error The attached dumps are almost entirely made up of the following bugcheck