acpi genuineintel---intel64-family-6-model-58
АФИША ФЕСТИВАЛИ КЛУБЫ ДЖАЗМЕНЫ БЛОГ АЛЬБОМЫ ФОТО СТИЛИ
Latino World music Авангард Блюз Мануш Мейнстрим Соул Фьюжн Свинг Босса-нова Фанк
A'cappella Cool jazz Smooth (soft) jazz Бибоп Госпел Даунтемпо Лаунж (Jazz Lounge) Модальный джаз Пост-боп Прогрессивный джаз Регтайм Хард-боп Эйсид-джаз Фри-джаз

: This can happen if the OS (especially Linux) has trouble parsing the motherboard's ACPI tables. Updating your BIOS/UEFI from the motherboard manufacturer's website is the primary fix.

If you ever encounter this string in your logs, take a moment to appreciate the decades of standards (ACPI, CPUID, x86-64) that silently work together—most of the time, perfectly.

The error is a hallmark of attempting to run modern Windows on 3rd Generation Intel hardware. While the processor is still capable, its power management requires specific, updated firmware to avoid BSODs. By updating the BIOS and Intel Management Engine, most users can stabilize their Ivy Bridge machines. To give you the most accurate steps, could you tell me: Is this a laptop or desktop? (e.g., Laptop) What is the manufacturer and model? (e.g., Lenovo T430)

: Windows uses these identifiers to fetch the correct drivers or microcode updates.

When this error appears, it typically means the Windows acpi.sys driver cannot correctly interpret the hardware's power state. Common causes include:

Your fan runs at 100% constantly, or the PC won’t wake from sleep. 🚀 Optimizing an Ivy Bridge System

The text ACPI\GenuineIntel_-_Intel64_Family_6_Model_58 is a used by Windows and other operating systems to identify a specific processor for driver management and power configuration. Technical Breakdown

The component targets the specific silicon design. Within Family 6, Model 58 specifies mainstream desktop and mobile processors constructed on Intel’s 22-nanometer (nm) Ivy Bridge manufacturing process. Deep Dive into Ivy Bridge (Family 6 Model 58)

Visit the motherboard manufacturer’s website and download the "Intel Chipset Driver." 2. BIOS/UEFI Outdated

If you are seeing this string in a system error or diagnostic log, it usually relates to power management or driver compatibility.