A user reports that their PC sometimes fails to boot, and when it does, they see a message saying 'Memory Management Error.' They have two 4 GB sticks of DDR3 RAM installed. A technician runs Windows Memory Diagnostic and finds errors on one stick. What should the technician do next?
Trap 1: Run a full system restore to fix the memory management error.
A system restore fixes software issues, not hardware errors. The diagnostic has confirmed a hardware fault.
Trap 2: Update the motherboard BIOS to improve memory compatibility.
BIOS updates can improve compatibility, but they won't fix a physically faulty RAM module that has been diagnosed with errors.
Trap 3: Remove both sticks and clean the contacts with a pencil eraser.
Cleaning contacts can help with intermittent issues, but the diagnostic has confirmed errors on one stick, indicating a hardware failure that cleaning won't fix.
- A
Run a full system restore to fix the memory management error.
Why wrong: A system restore fixes software issues, not hardware errors. The diagnostic has confirmed a hardware fault.
- B
Update the motherboard BIOS to improve memory compatibility.
Why wrong: BIOS updates can improve compatibility, but they won't fix a physically faulty RAM module that has been diagnosed with errors.
- C
Replace the faulty RAM stick with a new one of the same specifications.
Since the diagnostic identified a hardware fault, replacing the defective module is the appropriate corrective action.
- D
Remove both sticks and clean the contacts with a pencil eraser.
Why wrong: Cleaning contacts can help with intermittent issues, but the diagnostic has confirmed errors on one stick, indicating a hardware failure that cleaning won't fix.