News

The infamous "blue screen of death," which featured a text frown and terrified those who experienced it, no longer exists ...
Why change the blue screen to black now? Did the viral images of Times Square rendered useless by the BSOD cause that much ...
Nearly every Windows user has had a run-in with the infamous “Blue Screen of Death” at some point in their computing life.
The dreaded “blue screen of death” that has tormented millions of Microsoft Window users for decades is being put to rest.
Microsoft decided to replace Windows 11’s Blue Screen of Death with a black one, you know, again: Here's what's changing.
Microsoft is replacing the BSOD error with a black design in Windows 11 to speed recovery and strengthen resilience after the ...
After a long and storied history, the BSOD is being replaced. WIRED takes a trip down memory lane to wave goodbye to the ...
The new black unexpected restart screen is slated to launch this summer on Windows 11 24H2 devices, the company said.
With an upcoming Windows update, Microsoft will be doing away with the sad face emoji and QR code that appear on the Blue ...
The company has redesigned the error screen to what will soon be known as the Black Screen of Death. Compared to the current ...
For the uninitiated, the “screen of death” refers to the blue screen that takes over the entire Windows UI when an error so ...
Windows shared the new Black Screen of Death in a blog post, yet failed to even acknowledge the cosmic shift it has triggered. It simply calls this a “simplified UI,” because a blue background ...