
Windows 11: Microsoft buries “the blue screen of death”, 40 years after its creation
Microsoft Windows 11 Professional
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We were talking about it recently. After almost 40 years of good and loyal service (or cold sweats, depending on the point of view), the famous Blue Screen of Death – The famous bsod – fades. Microsoft has just confirmed that Windows 11 will soon go to Black Screen of Deathor the black screen of death, in good French. Less garish, clearer, and above all better thought to diagnose breakdowns without headache. A change of tone as symbolic as it is technical?
Windows 11 abandons the BSOD: Welcome to the black screen of death
The iconic blue screen of Windows, displayed here on a laptop, will soon be bowing after almost 40 years of service. © Shutershock
THE Blue Screen of Death had become an icon – certainly feared – of the Windows system. His often brutal appearance pointed out a fatal error. From this summer, he will rock black. Microsoft confirmed it in the wake of the announcement of Quick Machine Recovery, its new express recovery system.
The design of the new screen is more minimalist: finished the glazing blue, the sad face and the QR code. Instead, a more sober black interface that evokes the Windows update screen. It’s not just a makeover: the new BSOD now displays critical information without frills, including the error code and the faulty driver. According to David Weston, vice-president of security at Microsoft, this overhaul aims to “Provide clearer information, so that we can go straight to the heart of the problem and solve it faster”.
Here is the new Windows 11 error screen, supposed to replace the old blue screen after 40 years of service. © Microsoft
It is also a direct response to The crisis caused by the Crowstrike affair in 2024which had left millions of Windows machines blocked on a BSOD after a defective update. Microsoft wants to avoid returning such disasters.
Another notable change: system administrators will no longer have to extract the Crash Dumps And to dive into tools like Windbg to understand what is wrong. Essential information will be at a lookout, directly on the black screen.
The end of blue does not sign the end of the crashes, of course. But it embodies a turning point: Microsoft no longer wants the BSOD to be a symbol of failure, but a readable, useful tool, and better integrated into its ecosystem. After 40 years, it may be time.
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