logo
Windows is finally kicking the Blue Screen of Death to the curb

Windows is finally kicking the Blue Screen of Death to the curb

Engadget17 hours ago

The notorious Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) is finally heading to a junkyard upstate. This error message has been a key part of the Windows experience for almost 40 years. Microsoft has been teasing this change for years , but now we know the crash screen will be removed in an update to Windows 11 that's coming later this summer .
Windows computers are still going to crash , so there needs to be some sort of error screen. Microsoft is transitioning to a Black Screen of Death instead. This new crash screen will be black, as the name suggests, and there will be no cutesy frowny face and QR code. It'll just be a black screen with a short message that tells users they need to restart.
The new BSOD recalls the black screen shown during a Windows update, but it will list the stop code and system driver that contributed to the crash. This should make life easier for IT admins.
'This is really an attempt on clarity and providing better information and allowing us and customers to really get to what the core of the issue is so we can fix it faster,' David Weston, vice president of enterprise and OS security at Microsoft, said in an interview with The Verge . 'Part of it is just cleaner information on what exactly went wrong."
The new BSOD will debut alongside the Quick Machine Recovery feature . This tool is designed to restore machines that won't boot. These changes are being made in the wake of last year's CrowdStrike incident that crashed over 8 million Windows devices. That massive outage impacted banks, airlines and major corporations.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ZeniMax and Microsoft ratify union agreement
ZeniMax and Microsoft ratify union agreement

Yahoo

time38 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

ZeniMax and Microsoft ratify union agreement

Members of the ZeniMax Workers United-CWA union have ratified the contract agreement with parent company Microsoft. This agreement with the union representing the video game studio's quality assurance employees marks the first time Microsoft has entered into any union contract in the US. ZeniMax Studios is probably best known for its work on The Elder Scrolls Online. Stephen Totilo first reported on this news; we've reached out to Microsoft and the Communications Workers of America for additional comment. As with many organizing efforts, this step has been a long time coming. The group of employees voted to unionize in 2023, and Microsoft immediately recognized ZeniMax Workers United-CWA following the vote results. Microsoft also made its policy of neutrality toward union organizing at ZeniMax official in 2024. The QA workers from ZeniMax and Microsoft reached a tentative contract this May. The contract includes provisions for wage increases and minimum salaries, as well as industry-specific content such as a clearer crediting policy recognizing the role of QA and protections for the employees regarding use of AI. Update, June 20 2025, 12:18PM ET: Microsoft provided Engadget with the following statement, attributed to the company's Vice President and Deputy General Counsel, Amy Pannoni: 'This agreement reflects our ongoing commitment to employee voice and collaborative labor relations. Reaching this milestone with the ZeniMax quality assurance team and CWA is another step toward helping everyone here do their best work.'

How AI Could Reshape Global Education — And What Comes After
How AI Could Reshape Global Education — And What Comes After

Forbes

time43 minutes ago

  • Forbes

How AI Could Reshape Global Education — And What Comes After

AI is changing how students learn worldwide. But gaps in policy, teacher support and access could ... More leave millions behind. Artificial intelligence could be moving from an optional add-on in educational institutions to being an integral part of how students learn. That's, at least, what developments like Ohio State University's decision to roll out AI-fluency modules across its undergraduate programs by autumn of 2025 suggest. And it's not an isolated development. Back in October, 2024, California passed a bill mandating schools to incorporate AI literacy into their curricula. In April of 2025, President Donald Trump issued an executive order that aims at ensuring America's youth are provided with 'opportunities to cultivate the skills and understanding necessary to use and create the next generation of AI technology.' This order came just after China mandated AI education for all primary and secondary students across the country, starting this fall. Without a doubt, AI's potential has drawn attention from educators, policymakers and entrepreneurs alike. And as Waqas Suhail — cofounder and CEO of DaMeta1, who has worked closely with public and private institutions deploying intelligent learning systems — put it, 'we're entering a phase where AI in education is less about novelty but more about infrastructure and becoming part of the system itself — quietly, quickly and unevenly.' While ethical questions about how these tools are being used continue to be asked and bubbles of hype are already bursting, the major trends suggest that this technology is disrupting things dramatically, even in education. From Hype To Reality Suhail believes that the most meaningful AI applications in education don't just automate but adapt. And that's why he argues that the true promise of AI in the global education sector is not in replacing teachers, but in augmenting their time and insight. One example is DaMeta1's Ilmversity platform, a tool that builds virtual classrooms where AI tutors personalize lessons and provide teachers with real-time insights. Backed by accelerator programs at Microsoft and AWS, it's part of a broader wave of platforms pushing adaptive learning into the mainstream. Though the metaverse may have faded from headlines, AI-powered personalization — one of its more practical ideas — is still gaining traction in education. DaMeta1 CEO Waqas Suhail (Middle) with the company's U.S. team Other tools are also pushing AI-powered learning into classrooms — from Khan Academy's Khanmigo, which offers Socratic-style tutoring, to Google's LearnLM, a model trained specifically for educational dialogue. Together, these platforms are testing what personalized, AI-native education could look like. 'The best AI tools free teachers from administrative overload and give them space to do what no system can — build trust, motivate and respond to nuance,' Suhail told me. 'The future isn't AI versus teachers; it's AI with teachers.' That vision is beginning to take hold. Paul Tudor Jones told Bloomberg's Open Interest that AI-powered virtual tutors could 'dramatically improve learning outcomes for low-income students, reducing educational inequality.' In the U.K., Jill Duffy of Cambridge University Press & Assessment warned in a letter published in Financial Times that AI should 'enhance, not replace, human involvement in teaching,' adding that 'instead of questioning whether students have used AI, we should ask how.' Data also supports them. One study by Common Sense Media found that 70% of U.S. teens now use genAI tools for schoolwork. The World Economic Forum, meanwhile, projects that AI will eliminate nine million jobs by 2026, but also create eleven million. According to Suhail, that's not just a labor shift. 'It's a literacy gap in motion.' That gap is not limited to the U.S. In the UAE, for example, public-private initiatives are underway to bring AI curriculum into public high schools by 2026, according to recent government announcements. South Korea also plans to phase in AI-powered digital textbooks for school children as young as 8, with full integration across multiple subjects by 2028. The Race To Get It Right Around the world, educational leaders are scrambling to keep pace. UNESCO's Education 2030 agenda urges schools to prioritize AI tools that are inclusive, equitable and human-centered. The OECD and European Commission have also introduced AILit, a framework that 'outlines the essential knowledge, skills and attitudes young people need to understand and interact with AI systems in a confident and critical manner.' But implementation hasn't been at the same pace. Some schools have banned AI outright, while others deploy it without clear guidelines or training. Suhail, however, sees the inconsistency as both a risk and sign of progress. 'Every education system is at a different starting point. What matters now is whether we can build capacity, not just technology,' he noted. 'You can't solve an institutional problem with a software patch.' That warning resonates with education leaders who caution against tech overreach. 'Too much tech risks sidelining teachers, who should instead focus on nurturing learning and curiosity,' Duffy said. Still, the global race is underway — not just to adopt AI, but to do so responsibly. From how teachers are trained to how students are evaluated, countries are rethinking what learning should look like in an AI-native world. What Comes After The challenge now isn't just about who has access to AI, but also about how it's taught and who gets left behind if systems fail to adapt. Suhail believes that we have a rare window right now to shape how AI is used in education. That means investing not just in platforms but in people, policies and purpose. AI literacy mandates across the world and the rise of AI-first learning tools undoubtedly mark a structural shift in global education, where learning is entering an AI-native era. But as experts note, adoption alone doesn't equal progress. What matters is who gets to benefit, how equitably tools are deployed and whether they actually deliver better outcomes. 'The question isn't whether AI is coming to schools. It already has,' Suhail said. 'The question now is whether we're building systems that serve all learners — or just some of them.'

From podcasts to fatherhood, here's how CEOs are using AI
From podcasts to fatherhood, here's how CEOs are using AI

Business Insider

time2 hours ago

  • Business Insider

From podcasts to fatherhood, here's how CEOs are using AI

Microsoft's Satya Nadella Microsoft has invested heavily in AI, including introducing its Copilot assistant in 2023, inking a $13 billion partnership with OpenAI in 2024, and creating teams dedicated to developing the tech. CEO Satya Nadella, who took charge of the company in 2014, previously discussed how recent developments in AI will change workflows and humans' cognitive labor. For Nadella, AI has become a necessary part of his life, both in and out of the office, according to Bloomberg. During an interview published in May, Nadella said he enjoys podcasts but doesn't listen to them. Instead, he uploads the transcripts of podcasts to the Copilot app on his phone so he can discuss the content with a voice assistant during his commute. When he reaches Microsoft's headquarters in Washington State, Nadella uses Copilot to summarize his Outlook and Teams messages. He utilizes at least 10 custom agents from Copilot Studio to help with meeting prep and research. OpenAI's Sam Altman Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, has become one of Silicon Valley's most prominent tech giants thanks to OpenAI 's premier product, ChatGPT. The company launched a chatbot demo in 2022, and it quickly went viral on social media as people inquired about everything from diets to recipes. Over the last three years, OpenAI has shared more advanced GPT programs with users and is working to expand its global reach despite competition from Chinese tech companies like DeepSeek. This January, President Donald Trump announced a $500 billion private-sector investment in AI infrastructure called Stargate. OpenAI was among the companies asked to help with that project. So, it's unsurprising that Altman uses AI to streamline tasks his his personal life. Altman appeared on Adam Grant's "ReThinking" podcast this January, saying, "Honestly, I use it in the boring ways." Altman said the AI bots help him process emails or summarize documents. The tech has also helped him with fatherhood. During an OpenAI podcast interview published this month, Altman said he used AI "constantly" after welcoming his first child in February. "Clearly, people have been able to take care of babies without ChatGPT for a long time," Altman said. "I don't know how I would have done that." Nvidia's Jensen Huang Another major player on the global tech scene is Jensen Huang, Nvidia's CEO. The California-based company is one of the most valuable in the world, with a market value of over $3 trillion, according to Google Finance. The company is focused on designing and manufacturing hardware, including chips and graphical processing units to assist AI. During the 28th annual Milken Institute Global Conference in May, Huang told the audience he uses AI programs to learn new concepts. "I use it as a tutor every day," Huang said. "In areas that are fairly new to me, I might say, 'Start by explaining it to me like I'm a 12-year-old,' and then work your way up into a doctorate-level over time." AI's ability to rapidly collect, analyze, and communicate information could close the tech gap, according to Huang. "In this room, it's very unlikely that more than a handful of people know how to program with C++," Huang said. "Yet 100% of you know how to program an AI, and the reason for that is because the AI will speak whatever language you wanted to speak." In a 2024 interview with Wired, Huang said he uses Perplexity and ChatGPT "almost every day" for research. "For example, computer-aided drug discovery. Maybe you would like to know about the recent advancements in computer-aided drug discovery," Huanng said. "And so you want to frame the overall topic so that you could have a framework, and from that framework, you could ask more and more specific questions. I really love that about these large language models." Apple's Tim Cook Apple is navigating the global AI market under CEO Tim Cook, who announced Apple Intelligence — a generative AI system — at the company's Worldwide Developers Conference in 2024. He also unveiled a slew of other AI-based features at the time, including the Image Playground and the ability to remove unwanted background details from photos. Cook, who became CEO in 2011, publicly spoke about how he uses AI day-to-day in a 2024 interview with The Wall Street Journal. He said Apple Intelligence helps him summarize long emails. "If I can save time here and there, it adds up to something significant across a day, a week, a month," Cook told the outlet. "It's changed my life," he says. "It really has." One year earlier, Cook appeared on "Good Morning America" and said he was "excited" about developments in AI. "I think there's some unique applications for it and you can bet that it's something that we're looking at closely," Cook said. Zillow's Jeremy Wacksman Real estate tech companies like Zillow are also leaning into AI. The company announced in 2023 that it implemented an "AI-powered natural-language search" to help users navigate the website. CEO Jeremy Wacksman, like the other executives, has begun using AI to be more efficient. "I spend a lot of time either catching up on meetings I've missed or on asynchronous documentation," Wacksman told The New York Times Dealbook. "You can tell ChatGPT, 'Treat me like my role. Here's all this data — summarize it for me the way I would need to know going forward,' and you can get a personalized summary. That's just — that's far more valuable to me than to try to read a transcript at one-and-a-half speed or watch a video at one-and-a-half speed." Wacksman added that he wants Zillow staffers to experiment with the technology. "We've had what we call 'AI days,' where we showcase work and celebrate examples," Wacksman said. "We've also started weaving it into our bigger meetings, like product reviews: When a product manager-design-engineering team is prototyping, oftentimes, they're now using an AI tool called Replit. They're prototyping really quickly to get something in front of a user."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store