Here are some things for Ash and Luvean I gleened from the internet:
If anyone has a linksys lne100tx you need to toss it and get a different card. I did and it fixed all my bsod problems wirh filesharing apps. Just google for "stop ndis.sys lne100tx" and you will see a ton of people with the same problem. I have some cheapo generic thing now (I'm broke ) and now everything works fine.
Apparently, your cable/DSL modem could also be the culprit, I've read of several problems with the Linksys BEFCMU10 cable modem.
Essentially it could be anything in your network chain, probably
something in that lineage has a memory buffer leak in it's firmware that's overflowing or something similar.
It also seems people getting BT to crash have had issues with Zone Alarm 5, rolling back to a version of 4.5 solved their issues. Have either of you recently upgraded Zone Alarm?
Got this from another msgboard:
If you have an Intel Ethernet Adapter, try the following:
Before you start, first make sure your computer has the latest Service Pack and security-related hotfixes installed, or you may well be owned by one of the many worms going around right now while you attempt this process.
If your system has a Infared HID Input device that connects via USB, remove it from your system, and remove the hidden device from Device Manager. You might need to check the option "Show Hidden Devices" from the View menu.
Uninstall any firewall software such as ZoneAlarm, Kerio, Norton/Symantec, etc. You should shutdown and disable, but not uninstall, any antivirus software that has a scanning engine that has transparent network scanning, such as NOD32's IMON module.
Search using the search engine on http://developer.intel.com/ for the latest base set of network cards drivers for you system. It is crucial to get drivers dated 3/4/2003 or later.
Uninstall your existing files from via the Device Manager, and remove any Intel Driver add-ons packages like SNMP or PROset via the Add/Remove Control Panel. Reboot your system and reinstall the latest Intel Device Drivers using the Intel installation utility, not the Device Manager. You don't need to install anything beyond the base set, unless you want PROset functionality.
After the driver is installed, examine it's Properties sheet via Device Manager. You want to verify the correct driver is installed by checking the date and version information. Then make sure "Power Manager" is not enabled for the NIC, and if available "Adaptive Technolgy" is On, "PCI Bus Efficiency" is Disabled, "Offload TCP Segmentation" is Enabled, and "QoS Packet Tagging" is Disabled. Check these settings then reboot the system.
Enable your antivirus scanner first. Then reinstall the most recent version of your firewall software. Please note that I've noticed BSOD errors with Kerio Personal Firewall 2 and below when used with Intel drivers. You might try the new 4.x releases.
Good luck, let me know if it helps.
Best of luck guys, if you want more help diagnosing your problems drop a line on this thread with more specifics about your system/hardware/software.. Are you getting BSOD's or is the program just crashing? Any error messages?