Microsoft will change the design of the Windows So -Salled operating system, which occurs with serious failures. Now it will be called the “Black Death Screen”.
The new design will abandon the traditional blue, flooded emoticon and the QR code in favor of a simplified black screen. It is reported about the edge.
It is noted that the new simplified BSOD is more like a black screen that can be seen with Windows updates.
But it will also contain a stop code and a defective system driver. Therefore, the IT administrators will not need to pull out emergency accidents with a PC and analyze them using tools such as WindBG to find out what can cause problems.
This is really an attempt to make clarity and provide better information that will allow us and customers to understand the essence of the problem so that we can solve it faster, ”said Microsoft Vice President Microsoft.
This is partially cleaner information about what went wrong, where Windows and where the component, he added.
Microsoft states that this new BSOD design is released in Windows 11 “Later this summer”, as well as a new function of rapid recovery of the machine, which is designed to quickly restore computers that cannot be loaded.
BSOD changes are part of Microsoft wider efforts aimed at increasing Windows failure after the incident last year, which led to millions of Windows computers.
Error reports on a blue background were on the windows from the first versions in the mid-80s. BSOD itself appeared with the advent of the modern family of this OS – Windows NT – in 1993, and for almost 20 years its appearance has not actually changed.
With the release of Windows 8 in 2012, the developers added a sad emoticon on the screen, and in 2016, the QR code, which leads to the technical support site.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d_6yrjlqzgy
In March of this year, it became known about the company’s plans to change the design of the death screen. Then it was assumed that this could become green.
Source: Verge
Source: Racurs

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.