ASUS P5N-D motherboard
It supports up to 8 GB(2 GB X 4) of DDR2-800 RAM.
It has these primary devices:
NVIDIA nForce 750i SLI chipset
Realtek ALC883 high definition audio
NVIDIA nForce networking controller
It has full driver support for Windows XP and Vista and 7.
It has no driver support for Windows 8 or 8.1 or 10. This is the most current Windows 10 32-bit driver(10.18.13.5906) for its NVIDIA GeForce GT 620 graphics card.
There appears to be a little over 94 GB of free space in the C: drive.
I'm not there to see how you have that computer set up and what's installed and running in it, so I have no idea why you're seeing that message.
Thanks, what I can't understand is that when W10 came out the PC downloaded and upgraded itself without me having to do anything,only issue I have had (but before W10) is with graphics card driver which in the past you very kindly helped me with with and I tend to have to revert to 9 8 13 4788 https://forums.techguy.org/threads/...stopped-responding-and-has-recovered.1150346/ but before I tried the update the latest driver installed.
A Windows 7 computer will not "automatically" upgrade itself to Windows 10.
It requires intervention and permission from its user to do so.
You probably clicked on something or gave it permission to do so without realizing it.
9.18.13.4788 seems to be the most stable version for my NVIDIA graphics card in Windows 7, so I haven't updated it.
Windows 10 doesn't seem to have the temporary blacking out problem with the newer version, so I've keep the driver up-to-date.
10.18.13.5906 was released yesterday, so I installed it.
Just a thought even though the C drive is my primary drive, could it be something to do with only have 20GB free on the J drive?
I have just noticed there is a folder on there created around the time I tried to update yesterday called boot
When I get home tonight I will clear some stuff on that to make more room
I have no idea what that "Boot" folder is in the J: drive.
Don't mess around with or delete any folders that you're not familiar with, or else you may wind up with a non-working computer.
Any folders created by the upgrade from Windows 7 to Windows 10 are suppose to disappear after 30 days.
Once that time limit passes and those folders disappear, you lose the ability to revert from Windows 10 back to Windows 7.
First of all thanks to everyone who replied on this thread and apologies to the length of time to respond.
I finally managed to resolve this problem today after countless internet searches, reboots and fresh downloads via Media Creation Tool.
The error I was getting 0xC1900101 - 0x20017 (and by the look of many other posts others as well) was caused by a problem with the PFA (Predictive Failure Analysis) memory list. I resolved it by using the method listed here How to Manage the PFA Memory List
I have finally managed to update to the latest W10 build
Hopefully the above information will be helpful to other people experiencing a similar problem
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