
Microsoft's 'Blue Screen of Death' Dies After 40 Years of Memes, Jokes, T-Shirts
Like Pudding Pops and Benetton sweaters, another 1980s icon is gone. After 40 years of delivering the tragic news of a PC crash to Windows users, Microsoft's infamous "blue screen of death" is going away. A black screen of death will be replacing it, albeit without the sad face.
The blue screen of death has been around since Windows 1.0 came out in 1985. Named for its bright blue color, it's a critical error screen that pops up on computers using the Microsoft Windows operating system when the system crashes. The text on the screen varies, but it's sometimes accompanied by a frowning face made up of a colon and a left parenthesis. :(
Microsoft says the new black screen of death, which it calls a "simplified UI for unexpected restarts," will appear in its place starting later this summer on all Windows 11, version 24H2 devices.
Meet the new black screen of death.
Microsoft
The black screen of death will show the stop code and faulty system driver, allowing IT admins to more quickly identify the issue that caused the crash, rather than having to use debugging software.
It's not just a cosmetic change, it's part of Microsoft's Windows Resiliency Initiative, which is designed to increase resiliency and security in Windows systems. In a blog post on Thursday, Microsoft said that the new black screen of death is part of "streamlining the unexpected restart experience" and aiding in "quick machine recovery." The aim is to reduce recovery time to 2 seconds following a PC crash.
The Windows Resiliency Initiative was launched following 2024's CrowdStrike outage, which caused systems to go offline for numerous businesses, airports and governmental services. More than 8 million devices were affected.
A pop-culture icon
Over 40 years, the blue screen of death worked its way into pop culture, with plenty of memes, a subreddit devoted to it, and T-shirts and other items bearing its image.
When Microsoft suffered a massive global IT outage due to a CrowdStrike security update in July 2024, one X user dubbed the day International BlueScreen Day, sharing a photo of a conference room full of laptops all showing the blue screen of death.
Something about the unmistakable blue color of the error screen mixed with the frowny emoticon -- and the reminder that everyone's computer crashed once in a while -- made it an icon.
"I bought my husband a blue screen of death T-shirt and he wore it to work at Microsoft corporate headquarters back in the day," CNET editor Gael Fashingbauer Cooper said. "I wondered for a minute if anyone would be offended, but the first day he wore it, multiple people came up to him in the cafeteria to compliment it and ask where they could buy one for themselves."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Digital Trends
18 minutes ago
- Digital Trends
5 Android 16 tips and tricks you can try on your Pixel right now
Google pulled off a surprise this year by releasing Android 16 months ahead of the usual schedule. The stable build for its Pixel smartphones was released in the second week of June, and at the moment, QPR builds with experimental features are being tested. The release, beyond the hype, has been somewhat bittersweet. On one hand, we got a glimpse of all the exciting new changes that are landing with the OS upgrade. On the flip side, a few of the more remarkable features are yet to appear. Recommended Videos But that doesn't mean there isn't anything worth getting excited about. I got the stable update on release date after months of beta testing, and have since shifted to the developer channel on my Pixel 9. So far, these are the five features that I would recommend to all users who already have it installed on their phone, or folks waiting eagerly for Android 16 to land on their daily driver: Identity Check In the past couple of years, Google has really upped the ante for safety and security enhancements on Android. With the latest release, the company has added a new safety tool tied to verifying the legitimate owner's identity. It was originally introduced for Google's Pixel smartphones, but has now expanded to all devices that can run Android 16. Identity Check keeps track of your (or your phone's) location, and if it detects that the device is in an unfamiliar place, it will automatically lock sensitive settings and information behind a biometric lock. So, even if a bad actor has glanced at your lock screen password, they won't be able to do much damage. When you first set up Identity Check, you will be asked to designate a few trusted or safe locations. Once it is enabled, the device will require a biometric unlock (such as fingerprint or face unlock) for sensitive tasks such as changing password, accessing Passkeys, or disabling theft protection, among others. This ties in with the built-in anti-theft tools, which rely on motion algorithms among other identifiers to detect incidents such as theft or snatching. With theft detection enabled, the screen will lock automatically. Morever, if the device is taken offline, the screen lock kicks into action in that scenario, as well. Advanced Protection The overarching theme with Android 16 has been security, and this year, Google offered the most holistic solution it has delivered so far. The new system is called Advanced Protection, which acts more like a one-stop shop for securing your phone from all kinds of risks and threats. When you enable it, your apps, browsing activity, calls, and messages are automatically put in a secure environment. At the device level, your phone will lock itself automatically after 72 hours of inactivity to protect the onboard data. Moreover, theft detection lock is enabled, and USB access is blocked to only allow charging and not data transfer of any kind. Additionally, Google Play's malware detection kicks into action to scan apps and block risky apps from other sources. Advanced Protection also activates safe browsing in Chrome, which warns users about risky websites and unsafe download packages. The Messages app also shows warnings regarding unsafe links and will perform scam and spam detection in real-time. Similar guardrails are put in place for the Phone app, as well. Finally, it also disables access to unsecured Wi-Fi and 2G cellular networks. Notification Cooldown This one has been a bit of an on-and-off situation, but it is finally a part of the stable update. As the name suggests, Notification Cooldown saves you from the barrage of notification pings, especially those coming from the same app. Think buzzy family group chats or Discord channels with gaming buddies. Once you enable it, consecutive notifications from the same app are progressively lowered in volume. Simply put, you hear a loud alert tone only once, and the subsequent pings are slowly muted. Think of it as a fuss-free trick that makes chained notifications less vexing. In order to enable it, go to the Notifications dashboard in the Settings app, scroll down, and flick the toggle corresponding to the Notification Cooldown option. I work across apps such as Slack and Teams, which are always buzzing with workplace chatter. Notification Cooldown drowns the noise, but keeps me aware of the group activity. Battery Health Android 16 adds a dedicated dashboard, akin to iPhones, where you check the charging health status of the phone's battery. Here, you can check the charge retention efficiency, labeled as the phone's 'Battery capacity,' in percentage figures. Underneath, you will see tips to help enhance the battery life. This is also where you can enable the charging optimization system, activate adaptive charging, or limit the peak charging capacity to 80%. The goal is to reduce the electrochemical stress and tone down the number of full charge-discharge cycles so that the battery can last longer. When these features are enabled, the phone does voltage adjustment in the background to reach a balance between battery aging and the power drawn out of it without affecting the day-to-day performance of the phone. On a side note, if the battery health capacity falls below 80%, a replacement is the only reliable path ahead. Desktop Mode Android 16 enabled a hidden desktop mode that opens a Samsung DeX-like large screen environment on a monitor. It looks like ChromeOS at first glance, but currently missing out on a lot of features that could make it nearly as viable for serious work as DeX. It's a promising start, nonetheless. All you need is a USB-C cable, but I tried with an HDMI-USB splitter, and it worked out well. App windowing works fine, and so does cursor drag resizing. You get the familiar three-button layout in the top corner for core window activity controls. In its current shape, there are some issues with screen resolution output and keyboard shortcuts, and you will run into random stutters, as well. It makes sense why Google hid this desktop mode in the Developers Section of the Settings app. I am hoping that as QPR testing goes on and more brands start rolling out stable Android 16 updates, the desktop mode will mature accordingly.
Yahoo
18 minutes ago
- Yahoo
META Hires More OpenAI Researchers to Boost AI Ambition
Meta Platforms, Inc. (NASDAQ:META) is one of the . On June 28, The Information reported that Meta is hiring four more OpenAI artificial intelligence researchers. As per the report, Shengjia Zhao, Jiahui Yu, Shuchao Bi, and Hongyu Ren are the researchers who have each agreed to join. Earlier, the company had hired Lucas Beyer, Alexander Kolesnikov, and Xiaohua Zhai, who were working in OpenAI's Zurich office. The move marks Meta's push to hire more researchers from OpenAI, supercharging Mark Zuckerberg's efforts in superintelligence. A modern corporate finance office, full of financial analysts at work. While we acknowledge the potential of META as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: 10 AI Stocks in the Spotlight and Disclosure: None. Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Prediction: These 2 Artificial Intelligence Stocks Will Be the World's Most Valuable Companies in 5 Years
The AI market is growing, and as the dominant chip company, Nvidia is leading the way. Amazon's AI opportunities extend far beyond the cloud. 10 stocks we like better than Nvidia › At this point, it seems highly likely that artificial intelligence (AI) is on track to be the most impactful new technology since the internet. While the progression of the tech trend will certainly bring some twists and turns for investors, there's a good chance that the AI revolution is still in relatively early innings. Companies with heavy exposure to AI have been some of the market's best performers in recent years and helped push major indexes to new highs, and long-term investors still have opportunities to score wins with top players in the space. With that in mind, read on to see why two Motley Fool contributors think that two companies, in particular, with leading positions in AI will stand as the world's most valuable businesses five years from now. (Nvidia): Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has rocketed to the point where it is now the world's most valuable company, passing Microsoft and Apple along the way. There's good reason to expect it will still be at the top of the podium five years from now. A big reason for expectation is that Nvidia is growing much faster than Microsoft and Apple, as well as the rest of the world's most valuable companies. Revenue increased 69% year over year in its fiscal 2026 first quarter (ended April 27), and management is guiding for a 50% increase in the second quarter. It has incredibly high gross margins, which came in at 71.3% in the first quarter without a one-time charge, and the net profit margin was 52% in the quarter. Nvidia has a massive opportunity over the next few years as AI gets incorporated more into what people do. It partners with most of the major AI companies, like Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) and Microsoft, and as they roll out their AI platforms, there's an even greater demand for Nvidia's products. The demand for data centers alone, which AI companies use to help power generative AI operations, is exploding. Nvidia's data center revenue set the pace for the company overall, increasing 73% year over year in the first quarter. According to Statista, the AI market is expected to increase at a compound annual growth rate of 26% over the next five years, surpassing $1 trillion by 2031. As the leader in the chip industry, with the most powerful products and as much as 95% of the market share, it will be one of the main beneficiaries of that growth. Nvidia keeps launching new and more powerful chips to handle the increasing demand and power load. It's still bringing out the Blackwell technology that it launched last year, and it's seeing a huge need for its products to drive the inference part of generative AI. Nvidia management says its GPUs are being incorporated into 100 of what it calls AI factories (AI-focused data centers) under development in the first quarter, double last year's number, and the number of graphics processing units powering each factory doubled as well. Management expects this segment of the business to continue growing at a rapid pace. It's now launching Blackwell Ultra, a more powerful tool for AI reasoning, which is the next step after inference and requires greater capacity. CEO Jensen Huang envisions a future not too far off where AI is used in everything we do, and Nvidia is going to play a huge role in that shift. Keith Noonan (Amazon): As the leading provider of cloud infrastructure services, Amazon stands to be a major beneficiary of the AI revolution. The development, launch, and scaling of artificial intelligence applications stands to be a powerful tailwind for the company's Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud business, and the Bedrock suite and other generative AI tools should help to encourage clients to continue building within its ecosystem. With AWS standing as Amazon's most profitable segment by far, AI-related sales for the segment should help to drive strong earnings growth over the next five years. Artificial intelligence being integrated into the company's fast-growing digital advertising business should also help to improve targeting and demand and create another positive catalyst for the company's bottom line. But there's an even bigger AI-related opportunity on the table -- and it could make Amazon the world's most valuable company within the next half-decade. Even though AWS generates most of Amazon's profits, the company's e-commerce business still accounts for the majority of its revenue. The catch is that e-commerce has historically been a relatively low-margin business. Due to the emphasis that Amazon has placed on expanding its retail sales base and the high operating costs involved with running the business, e-commerce accounts for a surprisingly small share of the company's profits despite the massive scale of the unit. That will likely change with time. With AI and robotics paving the way for warehouse and factory automation and potentially opening the door for a variety of autonomous delivery options, operating expenses for the e-commerce business are poised to fall substantially. There's admittedly a significant amount of guesswork involved in charting how quickly this transformation will take shape, but it's a trend that's worth betting on. Given the incredible sales base that Amazon has built for its online retail wing, margin improvements look poised to unlock billions of dollars in fresh net income for the business. If AI-driven robotics and automation initiatives start to accelerate substantially for the company over the next five years, the e-commerce side of the business will quickly command a much higher valuation premium. If so, Amazon has a clear path to being one of the world's most valuable companies. Before you buy stock in Nvidia, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Nvidia wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $713,547!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $966,931!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,062% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 177% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join . See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of June 30, 2025 John Mackey, former CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Keith Noonan has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool recommends the following options: long January 2026 $395 calls on Microsoft and short January 2026 $405 calls on Microsoft. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Prediction: These 2 Artificial Intelligence Stocks Will Be the World's Most Valuable Companies in 5 Years was originally published by The Motley Fool Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data