pwshub.com

Who wrote the Blue Screen Of Death?

Veteran Microsoft engineer Raymond Chen has taken to his Old New Thing blog to clear up an apparent mystery regarding the origins of the infamous Windows Blue Screen of Death (BSOD).

But there is no mystery. Steve Ballmer wrote the text for the Windows 3.1x BSOD, although Chen whimsically called it a "blue screen of unhappiness" since it was more a warning that an application was poorly than anything else. A proper Windows 3.1x crash would actually result in a black screen of death – aka a command prompt – if you were lucky.

Windows 95 had a kernel error screen, the final version of which was written by Chen. This could be called a blue screen of death, although Chen noted: "Windows 95 lets you ignore the error, so it's not a true death." The engineer also conceded that ignoring the error was not guaranteed to leave the system in a usable state.

Finally, there is the Windows NT kernel error screen, which John Vert authored. If that bad boy pops up, NT is pretty much unrecoverable. However, the screen does contain a good deal of data to help engineers work out what made Windows so unhappy in the first place.

Subsequent versions of Windows NT have continued to evolve the data shown on the infamous screen right up to the present day.

  • CrowdStrike meets Murphy's Law: Anything that can go wrong will
  • Beware of fake CrowdStrike domains pumping out Lumma infostealing malware
  • The months and days before and after CrowdStrike's fatal Friday
  • How did a CrowdStrike file crash millions of Windows computers? We take a closer look at the code

Retired Microsoft engineer Dave Plummer said that he'd never heard the term "blue screen of death" in the corridors of Microsoft. Instead, it was known as a "blue screen" or, more frequently, a "bug-check."

Plummer also revealed why Vert went with white text on a blue background: "Put simply, because John's dev machine was a MIPS RISC box, and the firmware on that machine was white on blue.

"And in fact, his favorite editor at the time was SlickEdit, and the default text colors for SlickEdit were also white on blue.

"You could boot, code, and crash all in the same color scheme: white on blue."

Up until the CrowdStrike incident, the BSOD was an increasingly rare occurrence, appearing when running pre-production software, iffy drivers, or using problematic hardware. CrowdStrike changed all that, making the current crop of Windows bug-check screens something with which users became all too familiar.

But as to origins of the BSOD, the information is readily available. So long as your own PC has not fallen victim to a BSOD itself. ®

Source: theregister.com

Related stories
1 month ago - It all started with a 2014 blog post by developer Raymond Chen that indicated former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer wrote the text for the Ctrl+Alt+Del screen in Windows 3.1. People read it wrong and started believing Ballmer wrote the text...
1 month ago - falcon punch — Kernel access gives security software a lot of power, but not without problems. ...
1 month ago - Many businesses around the world are still recovering from the crashes stemming from an update to CrowdStrike's widely used security software. It caused Windows machines to become stuck in a Blue Screen of Death boot loop, impacting...
1 month ago - There can be only one … annoying management technique Veteran Microsoft engineer Raymond Chen has penned a blog that gives further insight into the inner workings of the software titan under Bill Gates's leadership.…
2 weeks ago - Labor Day sales are here, and CNET shopping experts have combed through hundreds of deals across various categories from top retailers to find the best deals in tech, home, outdoor goods, and more.
Other stories
48 minutes ago - As an Amazon Prime member, not only do you get a free Grubhub+ membership, you can also score $10 off your first $15 order.
49 minutes ago - Amazon's second Prime Day event of 2024 is still a few weeks away, but there are some bargains you can score now.
49 minutes ago - YouTube will roll out a new generative AI video tool named Veo later this year that'll allow creators to create 6-second clips with nothing more...
2 hours ago - FBI Director hails successful action but calls it “just one round in a much longer fight.”
2 hours ago - SocialAI takes the social media "filter bubble" to an extreme with 100% fake interactions.