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The Blue Screen of Death is a common name for the screen that occurs during a system crash in Windows operating systems. It is shown when the operating system can no longer function safely due to a fatal system error.

History
Contrary to popular belief, Windows 1.0 up to Windows 3.0 did not have a crash screen. However, if Windows 1.x or Windows 2.x is run on a newer version of MS-DOS, it will print out garbled contents of the memory during the boot before loading into the Windows shell due to incompatibility with the newer DOS versions. Whenever Windows did crash, it often resulted in a system hang or the shell returning back into DOS.

A concept of the blue screen debuted in Windows 3.1 build 068 as a black screen, which would be changed to blue in the RTM. In the enhanced-mode of Windows, pressing CTRL-ALT-DEL would open up a full-screen Task Manager warning. This warning would allow the user to terminate an unresponsive program, or if there's no unresponsive programs, simply allow the user to exit the screen or press CTRL-ALT-DEL again to reboot the system. Steve Ballmer wrote the original message for the Task Manager warning.

Raymond Chen would modify the Task Manager warning for Windows 95, starting with build ???. Eventually, the Task Manager warning was replaced with a more user-friendly dialog box. The blue screen would be used for severe errors at this point. Notably in Windows 9x builds, most crashes can be ignored by pressing any key on the blue screen, but doing so would often result in the system being unstable.

Windows NT-based operating systems would introduce the STOP errors, with each STOP error providing a different code for the cause of the crash. Windows NT 3.1 up to Windows 2000 build 1773.1 would list the addresses of multiple drivers during the crash. From Windows 2000 build 1796.1 onwards, the message would be simplified to only include possible instructions for the user should they encounter the blue screen. The font would be slightly changed on Windows XP build ????.

During the development of Windows 8, the blue screen has significantly changed. Build 7880 allowed the blue screen to support VBE 2.0 at all times and have smoother font. It would be quickly replaced to a more simplified black screen on build 7927, and would remain until build 8056 released with a black screen that would resemble the RTM. The black screen was changed back to the blue color on build 8102.

On Windows 10 build ?????, a QR code was added to the blue screen, linking to Microsoft's website for diagnosing blue screen errors.