Windows 10: Suspect!592b26e0d237

Discus and support Suspect!592b26e0d237 in AntiVirus, Firewalls and System Security to solve the problem; I am running a Window 10 64 Home OS on an HP Envy Laptop that is new this year 2020. It came with McAfee virus protection. I recently ran a full scan... Discussion in 'AntiVirus, Firewalls and System Security' started by Amma904, May 18, 2020.

  1. Amma904 Win User

    Suspect!592b26e0d237


    I am running a Window 10 64 Home OS on an HP Envy Laptop that is new this year 2020. It came with McAfee virus protection. I recently ran a full scan and McAfee isolated and removed Suspect!592b26e0d237 that it found in C:\nowireless.exe.

    1. Is this a virus?
    2. What is it supposed to do for its creator?"
    3. Where might I have run across and downloaded a program called nowireless.exe?
    4. Is this program necessary for something else?
    5. Should I find and delete it?

    I've had trouble staying connected to my wireless internet with HP Laptop computers since March 2019. This is the 4th HP computer that has trouble staying connected to the internet. Could this program have been causing my problems with all 4 computers? Could this be why my computer keeps losing internet connection?

    :)
     
    Amma904, May 18, 2020
    #1

  2. What kind of quad.

    I suspect you are at "the edge" of the power rating for the mainboard. Perhaps Q6600 wasnt listed due to TWO versions, C3 stepping at 105W and G0 stepping at 95W. Furthermore, if you OC the G0 Q6600 then it will use more than 95W. Since Q9300 is on a 1333 buss, then perhaps the BIOS doesnt give you scope to OC it, keeping it well withing the 95W envelope.

    My suggestion is, if the mainboard is important to you and you dont want to blow the power regulators or caps, to NOT OC the Q6600. Take the thing out of design spec (by OC'ing it) and you may very well rapidly reduce the half-life of your board.

    Also, as erocker suggests, there are 65W quads out now. I think those are better suited to this mainboard.

    Good luck.
     
    lemonadesoda, May 18, 2020
    #2
  3. herrshaun Win User
    [SOLVED] Multiple random BSODs, all pointing to the kernel


    No BSODs yet but I haven't been playing World of Warcraft which I suspect to be a possible cause.

    Was the driver verifier step necessary or just a suggestion?
     
    herrshaun, May 18, 2020
    #3
  4. groze Win User

    Suspect!592b26e0d237

    Build 10240 - Any expiry on ACTIVATED versions??


    I was going to do that for my benefit because of the way I have my partitions setup and to be legal with the EULA that isn't a step by step instruction. Right now I am waiting to see if build 10240 is actually the release build and yes I know at lot of people don't believe 10240 is the release version. I still may need to do that if build 10240 is not the release version.
     
    groze, May 18, 2020
    #4
Thema:

Suspect!592b26e0d237

Loading...
  1. Suspect!592b26e0d237 - Similar Threads - Suspect 592b26e0d237

  2. apphostregistrationverifier.exe and suspect activity

    in Windows 10 Gaming
    apphostregistrationverifier.exe and suspect activity: I am seeing apphostregistrationverifier.exe being contacted or contacting IP addresses that are registered to a Company in China 40.72.124.X. Unless Microsoft owns this range now, my question is how do I find out how this app is configured and are there logs I can look at? I...
  3. apphostregistrationverifier.exe and suspect activity

    in Windows 10 Software and Apps
    apphostregistrationverifier.exe and suspect activity: I am seeing apphostregistrationverifier.exe being contacted or contacting IP addresses that are registered to a Company in China 40.72.124.X. Unless Microsoft owns this range now, my question is how do I find out how this app is configured and are there logs I can look at? I...
  4. apphostregistrationverifier.exe and suspect activity

    in AntiVirus, Firewalls and System Security
    apphostregistrationverifier.exe and suspect activity: I am seeing apphostregistrationverifier.exe being contacted or contacting IP addresses that are registered to a Company in China 40.72.124.X. Unless Microsoft owns this range now, my question is how do I find out how this app is configured and are there logs I can look at? I...
  5. Random BSODs from time to time. Suspect Graphics card drivers

    in Windows 10 Gaming
    Random BSODs from time to time. Suspect Graphics card drivers: I'm getting random BSOD from time to time on a Windows 11 Thinkpad. The last one was this : 0x00000050 0xffffe083390e7498, 0x0000000000000000, 0xfffff803894ee870, 0x0000000000000002. I allready did a healthcheck on the RAM and reinstalled the previous version of windows. The...
  6. Random BSODs from time to time. Suspect Graphics card drivers

    in Windows 10 Software and Apps
    Random BSODs from time to time. Suspect Graphics card drivers: I'm getting random BSOD from time to time on a Windows 11 Thinkpad. The last one was this : 0x00000050 0xffffe083390e7498, 0x0000000000000000, 0xfffff803894ee870, 0x0000000000000002. I allready did a healthcheck on the RAM and reinstalled the previous version of windows. The...
  7. Bitlocker Windows 10 Home 22H2 external drive NOT prompting for password suspect Windows...

    in Windows 10 Software and Apps
    Bitlocker Windows 10 Home 22H2 external drive NOT prompting for password suspect Windows...: Bitlocker Windows 10 Home 22H2 external drive NOT prompting for password - suspect Windows Update TPM? to blame- cannot access external drivesthis has only been an issue for ? past year sometime?- again re likely culprit is Windows Update this seems a similar...
  8. Bitlocker Windows 10 Home 22H2 external drive NOT prompting for password suspect Windows...

    in Windows 10 Gaming
    Bitlocker Windows 10 Home 22H2 external drive NOT prompting for password suspect Windows...: Bitlocker Windows 10 Home 22H2 external drive NOT prompting for password - suspect Windows Update TPM? to blame- cannot access external drivesthis has only been an issue for ? past year sometime?- again re likely culprit is Windows Update this seems a similar...
  9. Bitlocker Windows 10 Home 22H2 external drive NOT prompting for password suspect Windows...

    in AntiVirus, Firewalls and System Security
    Bitlocker Windows 10 Home 22H2 external drive NOT prompting for password suspect Windows...: Bitlocker Windows 10 Home 22H2 external drive NOT prompting for password - suspect Windows Update TPM? to blame- cannot access external drivesthis has only been an issue for ? past year sometime?- again re likely culprit is Windows Update this seems a similar...
  10. Intel GPU Driver Causes BSOD — Suspected Driver or Process Conflict on Windows 10 Works...

    in Windows 10 Software and Apps
    Intel GPU Driver Causes BSOD — Suspected Driver or Process Conflict on Windows 10 Works...: Hi everyone, I'm experiencing a persistent and frustrating issue with the Intel GPU driver on one of my Windows 10 installations. Here's a breakdown of the problem: When I install the Intel GPU driver, my system crashes — black screen followed by a blue screen of death...