Greetings Lexmark Fred,
First I would like to restore your confidence regarding LabVIEW's stability. LabVIEW is not responsible for crashing your machine. As a user mode application, it can only cause a blue screen by exploiting an issue within the operating system or a driver. I suspect that the crash you are observing occurs when a VI is opened that uses a hardware driver that does not support power management. The currently shipping versions of NI-DAQ (6.9.3) and NI-488.2 (2.0) do not support power management features (NI-488.2 documents this in their readme <> and NI-DAQ explains how to disable Power Management in its readme <>). We are wo
rking to increase our level of power management support in upcoming releases of NI drivers.
In the interim:
One workaround is to disable standby and hibernate modes in your OS power management configuration as explained in the NI-DAQ readme linked above.
Another workaround that allows you to leave power management enabled is to (after waking from standby/hibernate mode, but before making use of any hardware by opening MAX or LabVIEW) open the device manager, delete (uninstall) all devices that make use of these hardware drivers, and then Refresh (Scan for Hardware Changes). After the devices are redetected, you should be able to use them normally.
If you continue to have crashes after disabling power management, then I would recommend contacting our Technical Support team at <> and select a contact method of phone or e-mail (whichever is more convenient for you). They will be most capable at solving this type of issue.
Sincerely,
Jeremiah Cox
Platf
orm Software Product Support Engineer
National Instruments
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