Error 233011

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • pr0p5man
    PCHF Member
    • Sep 2020
    • 21

    #1

    Error 233011

    I have a 14 year old Mesh PC, which runs Windows 10. Surprisingly, perhaps, everything works as it should, until recently, that is.
    I’ve been subscribing to an online weekly art course for 2+ years, in video format. Recently, the video images have begun blurring for around 5-10 seconds at a time, throughout the 1 hour length of the videos, before snapping back into focus.
    More recently, the videos have been failing, with the above error code displayed. I Googled this, and found that this error code is common, with various fixes suggested, none of which have worked for me.
    Although I use Edge as my browser, I tried Chrome as an alternative, but the same problems persist.
    To finish, I also have other online video art courses run via Media Player, with no problems whatsoever.
    Could the graphics card be at the root of these problems?
    Thanks.
  • phillpower2
    PCHF Administrator
    • Sep 2016
    • 15206

    #2
    Sorry but you have post on a tech forum asking for help but have provided zero information about your computer or it`s hardware, this makes it impossible for anyone to even hazard a guess as to what is going on.

    Is the computer a custom build or brand name such as Dell or HP, if a brand name, provide the model name or series number (not serial) if a custom build post the brand and model name or number for the CPU, MB, the RAM ( including the amount and speed ) add on video card if one is used and the PSU (power supply unit) providing these details will enable folk to better help you.

    Comment

    • Bruce
      PCHF Moderator
      • Oct 2017
      • 10697

      #3
      as already stated, without knowing your specs or the steps you have already tried to fix this, we are flying blind.

      to get started, I’d be looking at your internet speeds.

      go to speedtest.net and find your upload/download speeds and latency.
      also do one when the problem occurs and see how much difference they may be.
      also reboot the modem/router, even check for a firmware upgrade to it.

      as to your PC specs, do this.
      get Speccy; Speccy - Download Builds
      in Speccy, click File > Publish Snapshot (hit Yes if prompted to proceed with publish) > Copy to Clipboard > Close.
      now you can paste that link into your next post.

      Speccy doesn’t show the Power Supply Unit, so list the make/model of the PSU.

      Is Speccy safe?

      Comment

      • Malnutrition
        PCHF Moderator
        • Jul 2016
        • 7041

        #4
        Please download MiniToolBox and save it to your desktop.

        Run the program by right clicking on it and selecting Run as administrator.
        When the program opens select the following boxes:

        Flush DNS
        Report IE Proxy Settings
        Reset IE Proxy Settings
        Report FF Proxy Settings
        Reset FF Proxy Settings
        List content of Hosts
        List IP Configuration
        List Winsock Entries
        List last 10 Event Viewer Errors
        List Installed Programs
        List Devices (Only Problems)
        List Users, Partitions and Memory size

        Please post the log in your next reply

        Comment

        • pr0p5man
          PCHF Member
          • Sep 2020
          • 21

          #5
          Originally posted by Malnutrition
          Please download MiniToolBox and save it to your desktop.

          Run the program by right clicking on it and selecting Run as administrator.
          When the program opens select the following boxes:

          Flush DNS
          Report IE Proxy Settings
          Reset IE Proxy Settings
          Report FF Proxy Settings
          Reset FF Proxy Settings
          List content of Hosts
          List IP Configuration
          List Winsock Entries
          List last 10 Event Viewer Errors
          List Installed Programs
          List Devices (Only Problems)
          List Users, Partitions and Memory size

          Please post the log in your next reply
          Hello, Thanks for your response. How do I post this log, please? It’s currently in something called Notepad.

          Comment

          • pr0p5man
            PCHF Member
            • Sep 2020
            • 21

            #6
            Originally posted by phillpower2
            Sorry but you have post on a tech forum asking for help but have provided zero information about your computer or it`s hardware, this makes it impossible for anyone to even hazard a guess as to what is going on.

            Is the computer a custom build or brand name such as Dell or HP, if a brand name, provide the model name or series number (not serial) if a custom build post the brand and model name or number for the CPU, MB, the RAM ( including the amount and speed ) add on video card if one is used and the PSU (power supply unit) providing these details will enable folk to better help you.
            Well, I did mention that it was a 14 year old Mesh PC, but I take your point.

            I am not tech savvy, hence the reason for posting to a tech forum, without knowing what information would be required, or how much of it.
            It is, as I mentioned, a Mesh PC; Elite Pro Special Edition.
            Q8200 Quad Core Processor
            4MB Cache
            DDR2 SDRAM (4 x 2GB) 800MHz
            1TB Serial ATA 2 Hard Drive with 32MB Buffer
            550W PSU
            ASUS P5QL Pro Mainboard
            1GB ATI HD4670 Graphics Accelerator - DVI, DirectX 10.1 PCI Express 2

            Comment

            • pr0p5man
              PCHF Member
              • Sep 2020
              • 21

              #7
              Originally posted by Bruce
              as already stated, without knowing your specs or the steps you have already tried to fix this, we are flying blind.

              to get started, I’d be looking at your internet speeds.

              go to speedtest.net and find your upload/download speeds and latency.
              also do one when the problem occurs and see how much difference they may be.
              also reboot the modem/router, even check for a firmware upgrade to it.

              as to your PC specs, do this.
              get Speccy; Speccy - Download Builds
              in Speccy, click File > Publish Snapshot (hit Yes if prompted to proceed with publish) > Copy to Clipboard > Close.
              now you can paste that link into your next post.

              Speccy doesn’t show the Power Supply Unit, so list the make/model of the PSU.

              Is Speccy safe?
              thanks for your response. I have replied to phillpower2, regarding the spec details. I’ve just done a speedtest:- 30.01 Mbps download; 18.64 Mbps
              Idle latency 8; download latency 151; upload latency 145, whatever this means!

              Comment

              • pr0p5man
                PCHF Member
                • Sep 2020
                • 21

                #8
                Originally posted by pr0p5man
                Hello, Thanks for your response. How do I post this log, please? It’s currently in something called Notepad.
                Hopefully, here it is

                Comment

                • Bruce
                  PCHF Moderator
                  • Oct 2017
                  • 10697

                  #9
                  those network speeds can be a baseline reference going forward.
                  also do another speed test when the issue occurs.
                  have you rebooted your network hardware and checked for a firmware upgrade on the modem/router?

                  Comment

                  • pr0p5man
                    PCHF Member
                    • Sep 2020
                    • 21

                    #10
                    I’m sorry, but I have no idea how to reboot network hardware, and although I have the router address and password, I am unable to proceed as you suggest, because I’ve simply been asked to set up a new password.

                    Comment

                    • Bruce
                      PCHF Moderator
                      • Oct 2017
                      • 10697

                      #11
                      network hardware is anything that gets you on to the web.
                      so: wireless access points, modems, routers, switches, wifi boosters, ethernet over powerline adapters - whatever sits between your PC and the internet is the hardware used to get you online.
                      find it all and turn them off.
                      what a few seconds, then turn them back on.

                      you have been asked to setup a new password on what?
                      your PC, the router, the wireless network?

                      is this your gear, or works, or a friend or something?

                      Comment

                      • pr0p5man
                        PCHF Member
                        • Sep 2020
                        • 21

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Bruce
                        network hardware is anything that gets you on to the web.
                        so: wireless access points, modems, routers, switches, wifi boosters, ethernet over powerline adapters - whatever sits between your PC and the internet is the hardware used to get you online.
                        find it all and turn them off.
                        what a few seconds, then turn them back on.

                        you have been asked to setup a new password on what?
                        your PC, the router, the wireless network?

                        is this your gear, or works, or a friend or something?
                        OK, network hardware switched off and on again; PC, Wi-Fi booster, router/modem (actually called Hub Manager, but what’s in a name?).

                        As regards the new password, I was asked (prompted is a better word perhaps), to replace the original Admin password (found on a sticker on the modem, along with the address), and typed in accordingly, but without any indication that this would take me any further.
                        It may help you to know that the modem/router is downstairs, connected to the master telephone (dual) socket, whilst the PC is upstairs. There is no wired ethernet connection.
                        Yes, this is my “gear”, not works, or a friend, as I made clear in my initial post.

                        Comment

                        • Bruce
                          PCHF Moderator
                          • Oct 2017
                          • 10697

                          #13
                          it is always a very good idea to replace the default admin password on your modem/router.
                          otherwise anyone on the network can log on to that and change things.
                          did you manage to change the password?
                          no need to change to address, I mean, you can if you want to, but the default is usually just fine.

                          have you done a speed test now everything is rebooted to see if it has helped?
                          what’s the distance between your PC and the downstairs modem/router?
                          how many devices are involved to get your PC on to the web - the PC’s wireless adapter and the modem for starters - any boosters or powerline adapters?

                          Comment

                          • pr0p5man
                            PCHF Member
                            • Sep 2020
                            • 21

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Bruce
                            it is always a very good idea to replace the default admin password on your modem/router.
                            otherwise anyone on the network can log on to that and change things.
                            did you manage to change the password?
                            no need to change to address, I mean, you can if you want to, but the default is usually just fine.

                            have you done a speed test now everything is rebooted to see if it has helped?
                            what’s the distance between your PC and the downstairs modem/router?
                            how many devices are involved to get your PC on to the web - the PC’s wireless adapter and the modem for starters - any boosters or powerline adapters?
                            replaced admin pw. It appears that firmware is updated automatically, the previous occasion being June 29th this year. There is no process for me to do it.
                            Just carried out a speedtest; latency: Idle 37; download 229; upload 100. Download mbps 26.10; Upload mbps 12.72.
                            Does the time of day make any difference?
                            The PC is in the boxroom (first floor), directly above the hallway. The modem is in the living room (ground floor), to the left of the hallway, so the PC is almost directly above the modem, but to the right of it. In terms of height, first floor to ground, around 10 feet.
                            There’s a wireless receiver for the keyboard and mouse; wi-fi booster, modem, monitor. I don’t know what a powerline adapter is, so must assume I don’t have any.

                            Comment

                            • Bruce
                              PCHF Moderator
                              • Oct 2017
                              • 10697

                              #15
                              the new speeds are pretty much on par with the previous one.
                              and yes they can vary from hour to hour, all depends on how many users are on your network, how many connections in the neighbourhood are on the same node, how that node connects to the local exchange, and so forth - in short, an absolute mine-field of variables, with everyone vying for top spot.

                              wireless anything (TV , radio, internet) always works best pointing down, that’s why they always put antennas on top of things like buildings and mountains.
                              so having your PC almost directly above the transmitting modem is probably the worst location. instead of direct signals, it would be getting bounce-back signals of walls and the like.

                              how long as this video blurring issue been going one?
                              any connection with extra users on the network, or new devices in the house?
                              is it only the one web site with the video course giving you issues? if so, see if they have a support page and contact them, maybe they have made soem changes recently.

                              to rule out connection speed (or lack of) being your root cause, temporarily moving the PC to the modem and connecting via an ethernet cable would verify that.

                              the MBT report shows system file corruption.
                              try these from an elevated command prompt;
                              [ul]
                              [li]chkdsk c: /r[/li][li]sfc /scannow[/li][li]dism /online /cleanup-image /restorehealth[/li][li]dism /online /cleanup-image /startcomponentcleanup /resetbase[/li][/ul]

                              still waiting on the Speccy report.

                              Comment

                              Working...