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Nearly every Windows user has had a run-in with the infamous "blue screen of death" at some point in their computing life. Now, after more than 40 years of being set against a very recognizable ...
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Microsoft replaces the iconic Blue Screen of Death with a black version in Windows 11, focusing on clarity and modern design.
Microsoft decided to replace Windows 11’s Blue Screen of Death with a black one, you know, again: Here's what's changing.
Nearly every Windows user has had a run-in with the infamous “Blue Screen of Death” at some point in their computing life.
The blue screen that stressed computer users for more than three decades is giving way to a black one.
As part of the WRI, Microsoft is replacing the decades-old Blue Screen of Death with a simplified black interface to reduce downtime and speed up recovery during system failures.
Beyond the now- black background, Windows' new "screen of death" has a slightly shorter message. It's also no longer accompanied by a frowning face—and instead shows a percentage completed for the ...
Why change the blue screen to black now? Did the viral images of Times Square rendered useless by the BSOD cause that much reputational harm?