from
Jargon File (4.4.4, 14 Aug 2003)
Blue Screen of Death
n.
[common] This term is closely related to the older {Black Screen of
Death} but much more common (many non-hackers have picked it up). Due
to the extreme fragility and bugginess of Microsoft Windows,
misbehaving applications can readily crash the OS (and the OS
sometimes crashes itself spontaneously). The Blue Screen of Death,
sometimes decorated with hex error codes, is what you get when this
happens. (Commonly abbreviated {BSOD}.) The following entry from the
Salon Haiku Contest, seems to have predated popular use of the term:
Windows NT crashed.
I am the Blue Screen of Death
No one hears your screams.
from
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
Blue Screen of Death
BSOD
<humour> (BSOD) The infamous white-on-blue text screen which
appears when {Microsoft Windows} crashes. BSOD is mostly seen
on the 16-bit systems such as {Windows 3.1}, but also on
{Windows 95} and apparently even under {Windows NT 4}. It is
most likely to be caused by a {GPF}, although Windows 95 can
do it if you've removed a required {CD-ROM} from the drive.
It is often impossible to recover cleanly from a BSOD.
The acronym BSOD is sometimes used as a verb, e.g. "{Windoze}
just keeps BSODing on me today".
(1998-09-08)