Windows 11 update makes the Blue Screen of Death blue again
Update is available for Windows Insiders, will be released to the public soon
Microsoft is pushing another bug-fix update for Windows 11 out to its Beta and Release Preview Insider channels today, and like every one of the Windows 11 bug-fix refreshes delivered up until now, the rundown of settled issues is more than long enough to justify any individual who chose to remain on Windows 10 for a couple of more months. The update (form number 22000.346, for the record) fixes delivering issues with the new Taskbar and Start menu, some Bluetooth sound volume control issues, issues running some 32-cycle applications, and an assortment of printer issues, among numerous different things.
Covered among its other, more significant changes is the rollback of one of Windows 11's restorative augmentations: the "Dark Screen of Death." This update will change the shade of this framework killing mistake screen back to blue, "as in past forms of Windows" (and as the PC divine beings expected).
The Blue Screen of Death (or BSoD) has become notable by its own doing, with a genuinely dynamic Reddit people group committed to spotting it and other PC mistakes out in nature. It's an update that underneath the gleaming cunning of our screen-filled present day presence prowls a lot of feeble PCs that, similar to pandemic-time humankind, are regularly scarcely holding it together.
Updates commonly hit the Release Preview channel a couple of days or weeks before they're delivered to the general population, so you can anticipate this new Windows 11 form and its re-blued blue screen to be accessible to all PCs running Windows 11 soon.