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A stop error screen or bug check screen, commonly called a blue screen of death (also known as a BSoD, bluescreen, or "blue screen of doom"), is caused by a fatal system error and is the error screen displayed by the Microsoft Windows family of operating systems upon encountering a critical error, of a non-recoverable nature, that causes the system to "crash." The common expression blue screen of death comes from the color of the screen generated by the error.Stop errors are usually hardware or driver related,[1] causing the computer to stop responding, whereupon, in the latest versions of Windows, the screen presents information for diagnostic purposes that was collected as the operating system performed a bug check.A unique Blue Screen of Death with only one line of error code as seen in Windows Vista, which is an ACPI configuration-related errorIf configured to do so, the computer will save all of its memory data to a disk file (known as a "dump file") for later retrieval, to assist in the analysis by an expert technician of the causes of the error.The term Blue Screen of Death originated during development of the OS/2 operating system at Lattice Inc, the makers of an early Windows and OS/2 compiler. Developers encountered the Stop screen when bugs in the operating system's software (typically null pointers) slipped through the net during beta testing. In feedback to IBM, a company known informally as 'Big Blue', the developers humorously described the Stop screen as the 'Blue Screen of Death' in consequence of its color, of the association of that color with IBM, and of the finality of the error (which caused the computer to hang without any possibility of recovery, compelling a manual restart)