
Microsoft is rolling out significant changes to Windows 11 24H2 as part of the Windows Resilience Initiative, designed to reduce downtime and help devices recover from serious failures, as well as an overhaul of the all-too-familiar BSOD crash screens.
Microsoft's Windows Resiliency Initiative is a new effort by Microsoft to make Windows more stable, self-healing, and faster to recover from critical failures. This initiative is in direct response to recent incidents that caused widespread disruptions and crashes due to flawed updates, like the global CrowdStrike content update outage.
Microsoft has now announced that it has replaced the Windows Blue Screen of Death with a new Black Screen of Death, featuring a revamped interface.
"The new UI is simpler, and more aligned with Windows 11's design language," explains Microsoft.
"It removes the frowny face and QR code, and instead presents a short, readable message with the stop code and faulty driver information. We've also added a hex version of the stop code to make it easier to search for help – a common user request."

Source: Microsoft
Microsoft also announced the new Quick Machine Recovery feature, which aims to resolve boot failures without requiring manual intervention.
When a system is unable to boot and enters the Windows Recovery Environment (WinRE), it can now automatically connect to a network, check for applicable fixes from Windows Update, and apply them if available.
This new feature can be used to automatically disable known faulty drivers or remove software that is preventing Windows from starting, all without human intervention and with a fix pushed from Microsoft's servers.
"Once enabled, the feature activates during critical boot failures," explains Microsoft.
"It uses the secure and connected Windows recovery environment to scan Windows Update for applicable fixes published by Microsoft. If a matching remediation for a widespread issue is available, it is applied automatically, restoring the device without requiring manual intervention."

Source: Microsoft
This feature aims to prevent widespread Windows issues, such as the one we saw when CrowdStrike pushed out a faulty content update that crashed over 8.5 million Windows devices and could only be fixed with manual intervention.
This new feature is available in Windows 11 Home, Pro, Education, and Enterprise editions starting with the 24H2 update build 26100.4770 after installing the KB5062660 update, released today.
Quick Machine Recovery is enabled by default on Home devices and can be manually configured or disabled by IT admins on managed devices using Intune, ReAgentC.exe, or other supported policy tools.
Microsoft says it will further enhance the tool in the future by including advanced IT admin tools for remediation management, monitoring, additional policy and rollout controls.
As part of the Windows Resiliency Initiative, Microsoft is also working with antivirus and EDR vendors to move their drivers outside of the Windows Kernel to prevent crashes from faulty drivers.
Microsoft is currently testing this new Windows endpoint security platform with a set of partners.
Update 7/22/25: Updated story to reflect it was a faulty CrowdStrike content update, not driver.
Break down IAM silos like Bitpanda, KnowBe4, and PathAI
Broken IAM isn't just an IT problem - the impact ripples across your whole business.
This practical guide covers why traditional IAM practices fail to keep up with modern demands, examples of what "good" IAM looks like, and a simple checklist for building a scalable strategy.





Comments
cyberwolfe - 5 months ago
"That lens flare is so 1991" - Ralph Wiggum
Lawrence Abrams - 5 months ago
I like my lens flare image!
deltasierra - 5 months ago
I thought the big tech companies were changing terminology and appearances on things to avoid "black" having any negative connotations, e.g. blacklist is now blocklist, blackhat is now unethical hacker, etc? Even if MS doesn't want to officially call it "black screen of death," that's what it will be known by in colloquial terms.
BusFronken - 5 months ago
Such a tragedy
Darkicorn - 5 months ago
Could they make the display of the useful information any smaller? Perhaps site it somewhere it has an even better chance of being off the visible display if something isn't quite right with the display settings? Why are you actively being unhelpful, Microsoft decision makers?