Definitely sounds like a thermal issue with the hardware. I assume the problem happens only on power-up. When the box powers up when cold, will it act up after a period of time aftert warm-up? Off the top of my head: Some chips may fail as they heat up from use. I once had, as I recall a northbride chip that would act up, "freezing" the PC after it warmed and during game playing. Placed one of those 60 mm fans to blow on the chip. Never acted up again in about 5 years of use. Could be faulty or failing memory. Perhaps the hard drive. Could be failing. Or it may not have enough time to "spin-up" when booted. I think you can adjust this in your bios. Roy >>> mikkel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 03/09 9:41 AM >>> Tony Crouch wrote: > > --- chen li <chen_li3@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> Hi all, >> >> I have both windows XP and FC4(default) installed in >> one hardware and use GRUB to select which OS is >> used. >> I recently find that my computer gets stuck after I >> turn it on. And here is the message on screen: >> ............. >> Welcome to Fedora core >> >> Press "I" to enter interactive startup >> >> Starting udev: [OK] >> >> INitialialzing hardware... storage network audio >> done >> [ok] >> >> >> The only thing I can do is to shut down the whole >> power and wait for a while. When I turn the computer >> on it works fine. It happens several time. I >> wonder if anyone out there knows how to fix it. >> >> Thank you very much, >> >> Li >> > > I seen some computers exhibit similar behaviour with some faulty or 'on > the way out' capacitators. What do some of you more experienced guys think > of this suggestion? > > Cheers, > TC > It sure sounds like a hardware problem rather then a software problem. Besides a bad cap, I have also seen ICs that are going bad become temperature sensitive. While the usual problem is that they fail when they get warm, you sometimes will get one that has to warm up before it will function right. This type of problem can also be cause by a cracked trace that closes again when the computer heats up. In any case, it is one of the hardest problems to troubleshoot, because it tends to fix itself as you test. Sometimes all you can do is go in with a can of freeze spray, and selective cool down different parts until you cause the problem to appear again. (Or replace parts until it works again.) Mikkel -- Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, for thou art crunchy and taste good with Ketchup! -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list