According to Johansson (a former program manager for security policy at
Microsoft), there appears to be two separate issues. One affects only
AMD-equipped PCs sold by Hewlett-Packard Co. "The problem is that HP, apparently
along with other OEMs, deploys the same image to Intel-based computers that they
do to AMD-based computers," said Johansson. "Because the image for both Intel
and AMD is the same, all have the intelppm.sys driver installed and running.
That driver provides power management on Intel-based computers. On an AMD-based
computer, amdk8.sys provides the same functionality." Running the
intelppm.sys driver on an AMD-powered PC isn't normally an issue, but on the
first reboot after a service pack installation, it causes "a big problem,"
Johansson said. The machine either fails to boot or crashes and immediately
reboots.
The other problem, according to Johansson, also seems to affect only AMD
machines, and involves an error message indicating trouble with the PC's BIOS.
Johansson said that the ensuing recommendation to update the BIOS is "most
likely not your problem," but said that the problem may be isolated to a
specific motherboard. "Possibly, it is related to computers with the Asus
A8N32-SLI Deluxe motherboard in them," he said.
Johansson also spelled out workarounds for both problems on his blog. The HP
issue can be solved by disabling the intelppm.sys driver, while the second fix
requires the user to plug in a USB flash drive before booting.