Blue screen of death BSOD - negative advertising
Sometimes BSOD shows ads for how Windows is unstable at work. You can see advertising on trains, monitors installed at airports, on LCD screens in the subway, in video games, on stretch marks, adapted on the walls of buildings ...
Blue screen of death BSOD on Times Square: a hefty profile of Windows advertising:

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Your bus arrives: but you must first run CHKDSK / F to find out when exactly:

Steady Reliable. With warranty, as shown on this Vista PC:

It’s good that Boeing doesn’t use Windows to run autopilot:

It turns out that Windows simply throws out its Aero GUI, which comes instead of a DOS-style text screen, which scrolls through some technical parameters that are completely unclear to the average user (well, for example: “0x0000001E, KMODE_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED”).
There is a target group of publicly designated BSODs. An example is screens placed on buildings and running for days on end.
The world's largest BSOD - The Bay department store in Toronto:

He gives Apple the hands of an abyss of material for work.
Record from the secret diary of Steve Jobs (Steve Jobs): “Look. This woman said that Dell provided her with a poor-quality machine, and when she expressed dissatisfaction, they sent her four more of the same, and all of them were also defective. “Defect”, pursuing all of its five machines with the persistence of a plague, is that its PC “goes into blue screen mode, indicating a serious problem that needs to be restarted to restart the PC”. The poor woman simply did not understand that in the Windows world this is not considered a malfunction. This is a common operating procedure. ”
The trouble is that Microsoft does not understand what kind of problem BSOD creates. Despite the fabulous marketing campaigns at prices, no one at Microsoft seems to understand that the best thing they can do is change the look of these BSODs. Nothing speaks so well of "poor-quality programming," as the blue screen reads: "Yes, it is clear that someone's software knocked down the core, but we cannot fix it and remain in graphical mode."
Apple guessed it a year ago in OS X, and made a translucent black screen on which you can read: “Restart Macintosh” (inscription in different languages). So simple and attractive.

Panic in the core: not such a terrible thing as the BSOD from Microsoft
Admittedly, the elegant graphic design of the Apple system crash is the first of its kind. If there is a problem with the download, an image of the “sad Mac” appears, and in very bad cases, the Mac issues a black screen and a beep.
Taken from:
http://winline.ru/