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* {{anchor|Blue}}The '''[[Blue Screen of Death]]''' (also called BSOD, Stop error, or bluescreen) is a common name for a screen displayed by the [[Microsoft Windows]] operating system when a system error occurs.
* {{anchor|Blue}}The '''[[Blue Screen of Death]]''' (also called BSOD, Stop error, or bluescreen) is a common name for a screen displayed by the [[Microsoft Windows]] operating system when a system error occurs.
* {{anchor|Black}}A '''[[Black Screen of Death]]''' is a failure mode of [[Windows 3.1x|Microsoft Windows 3.x]].
* {{anchor|Black}}A '''[[Black Screen of Death]]''' is a failure mode of [[Windows 3.1x|Microsoft Windows 3.x]].
* {{anchor|Red}}A '''[[Blue_Screen_of_Death#Red_Screen_of_Death|Red Screen of Death]]''' appears in early beta versions of [[Windows Vista]].
* {{anchor|Red}}A '''[[Blue_Screen_of_Death#Red_Screen_of_Death|Red Screen of Death]]''' appears in early beta versions of [[Windows Vista]] and is also the colour of the fatal error screen on the [[Playstation 3]].
* {{anchor|Purple}}The '''[[VMware ESX#Purple Diagnostic Screen|Purple Screen of Death]]''' is used by [[VMware ESX Server]], a server virtualization product by [[VMware|VMware, Inc.]] It is displayed in the event of a fatal kernel error. The screen provides error codes that can be used for debugging purposes.
* {{anchor|Purple}}The '''[[VMware ESX#Purple Diagnostic Screen|Purple Screen of Death]]''' is used by [[VMware ESX Server]], a server virtualization product by [[VMware|VMware, Inc.]] It is displayed in the event of a fatal kernel error. The screen provides error codes that can be used for debugging purposes.
* {{anchor|kernel panic}}A '''[[kernel panic]]''' is used primarily by [[Unix]] and [[Unix-like]] operating systems: the Unix equivalent of [[Microsoft]]'s Blue Screen of Death. It is used to describe a fatal error from which the operating system cannot recover.
* {{anchor|kernel panic}}A '''[[kernel panic]]''' is used primarily by [[Unix]] and [[Unix-like]] operating systems: the Unix equivalent of [[Microsoft]]'s Blue Screen of Death. It is used to describe a fatal error from which the operating system cannot recover.

Revision as of 18:48, 30 December 2012

A Blue Screen of Death as it appears in the Windows 9x family of operating systems.

In many computer operating systems, a special type of error message will display onscreen when the system has experienced a fatal error. Computer users have dubbed these messages screens of death as they typically result in unsaved work being lost and often indicate serious problems with the system's hardware or software. Screens of death are usually the result of a kernel panic, although the terms are frequently used interchangeably. Most screens of death are displayed on an even background color with a message advising the user to restart the computer.

Notable screens of death

A Linux Kernel Panic, forced by an attempt to kill init.
Mac OS X 10.6 kernel panic.
File:Windows XP Blue Screen of Death (PAGE FAULT IN NONPAGED AREA).svg
Blue Screen of Death as seen in Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 7

Other screens of death

The following refers to screens of death that are not based upon computer operating systems and appear instead in other media.

  • A White Screen of Death appears on several different operating systems[citation needed], CMS[1] and BIOSes, including Apple iPhones and iPods.[2]
  • A Yellow Screen of Death occurs when an ASP.NET web application encounters a problem and crashes.[3]
  • A Green Screen of Death appears when Motorolla PVRs crash prior to rebooting.
  • A Pink Screen of Death appears when Nvidia GTX 280 or 260 crashes which trying to run a program that requires heavy matrix operation.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Drupal White Screen of Death".
  2. ^ Ulanoff, Lance (2006-09-12). "The Apple iPod's White Screen of Death". PCMag.com. Retrieved 2011-05-23.
  3. ^ Busoli, Simone (November 15, 2007). "ELMAH - Error Logging Modules And Handlers".[self-published source?]

Template:Screens of death