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#STOP SC D FONT WINDOWS#
In a follow-up on September 9, 2014, Raymond Chen complained about this widespread mistake, claimed responsibility for revising the BSoD in Windows 95 and panned BGR.com for having "entirely fabricated a scenario and posited it as real". The article focused on the creation of the first rudimentary task manager in Windows 3.x, which shared visual similarities with a BSoD. On September 4, 2014, several online journals, including Business Insider, DailyTech, Engadget, Gizmodo, Lifehacker, Neowin, Softpedia, TechSpot, The Register, and The Verge incorrectly attributed the creation of the Blue Screen of Death to Steve Ballmer, Microsoft's former CEO, citing an article by Microsoft employee Raymond Chen, entitled "Who wrote the text for the Ctrl+Alt+Del dialog in Windows 3.1?". Because of the instability and lack of memory protection in Windows 9x, BSoDs were much more common.
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In the Windows 9x era, incompatible DLLs or bugs in the operating system kernel could also cause BSoDs.
#STOP SC D FONT DRIVERS#
Hence, it became known as a "stop error."īSoDs can be caused by poorly written device drivers or malfunctioning hardware, such as faulty memory, power supply issues, overheating of components, or hardware running beyond its specification limits. In its earliest version, the error started with ***STOP. The first blue screen of death appeared in Windows NT 3.1 (the first version of the Windows NT family, released in 1993) and all Windows operating systems released afterwards. As with it predecessors, Windows 3.x exits to DOS if an error condition is severe enough. Windows 3.1 would also displays a blue screen when the user presses the Ctrl+Alt+Delete key combination while no programs were unresponsive. Windows 3.1 changed the color of this screen from black to blue. Windows 3.0 uses a text-mode screen for displaying important system messages, usually from digital device drivers in 386 Enhanced Mode or other situations where a program could not run. When the system did crash, it would either lock up or exit to DOS. This screen, however, was not an actual crash screen rather, it was the outcome of a bug in the Windows logo code. The "Incorrect Dos Version" screen on Windows 1.0 featuring random charactersīlue error screens have been around since Windows 1.0 if Windows found a newer DOS version than it expected, it would generate a blue screen with white text saying "Incorrect DOS version" followed by a list of loaded kernel modules and their respective memory addresses, before starting normally.