
"BORK!BORK!BORK! Today's bork belongs in the dim and distant past - a reminder of when Windows had proper crash screens. Snapped by an eagle-eyed Register reader, this traditional Windows Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) was found in the delightful Spanish city of Seville. The five-star Barceló Sevilla Renacimiento hotel is notable for its imposing curved walls and "an architectural design reminiscent of the Guggenheim in New York." Readers would therefore be forgiven for thinking that no euros would be spared when it comes to the signage."
"The code 0x00000024 suggests something has happened on the disk. Tapping F8 during startup should permit a chkdsk to hunt out corruption. Alternatively, it could be a driver doing something naughty in the kernel following an update, thus stirring memories of 2024's CrowdStrike incident, in which a faulty update file from the company unleashed mayhem on Windows devices around the world."
"The "classic" Blue Screen of Death has become a rarity in recent years, not because Windows is any more reliable, but because Microsoft updated it with a sad emoticon to indicate that something has gone wrong. However, it is a delight to see the old warhorse every now and again, assuming that the Barceló Sevilla Renacimiento conference center is not plugging a day of sessions on how to deal with obscure and unhelpful error codes. ®"
An older-style Windows Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) appeared on a 'What's On' display at the Barceló Sevilla Renacimiento conference center in Seville. The visible stop code 0x00000024 typically points to disk corruption and can often be addressed by running chkdsk from safe mode via F8. A faulty kernel driver after an update could also cause the error, echoing the disruptive 2024 CrowdStrike update incident. The classic blue screen has become uncommon since Microsoft moved to a sad-emoticon error screen, and the sight of the traditional BSOD prompted a nostalgic and bemused reaction.
#windows-blue-screen-of-death #barcelo-sevilla-renacimiento #disk-corruption-0x00000024 #crowdstrike-update-incident
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