The blue screen of their death Windows (Blue Screen of Death), also known as BSOD, has been around for many years and is thus known to almost all Microsoft operating system users.
If you encounter a BSOD something is wrong with your system, and often one way to recover is to restart your computer. At best, because a BSOD can be a harbinger of significant complications.
But officials at the Louvre Museum thought of presenting BSOD as a piece of digital art.
As you can see in the photo above, the giant blue screen of death appears on the museum floor. THE redditor who took the photo states that the "exhibit" is not new, because it did not go to the Louvre Museum while people are supposed to be in lockdown due to the coronavirus epidemic.
Microsoft recently released one Green Screen of Death or GSOD for the program Windows Insider.
The new screen is used by the company for the previews of their new builds Windows 10, which helps the company distinguish Windows crashes encountered in Windows 10 preview builds from those occurring in stable Windows builds.
So it makes it easier for developers to search of the cause of the crash to find a possible solution.