BSOD Makes Appearance at Olympic Opening Ceremonies
Whiteox writes "A BSOD was projected onto the roof of the National Stadium during the grand finale to the four-hour spectacular at the Olympics. Lenovo chairman Yang Yuanqing chose to go with XP instead of Vista because of the complexity of the IT functions at the Games. His comment on Vista? 'If it's not stable, it could have some problems,' he said. Evidently Bill Gates attended the opening ceremony, so he must have witnessed it."
Visible computer glitches pop up in the most unexpected places these days. I went to a 25th anniversay screening of Wargames at a local theater recently. I wasn't even aware that I was in a digital theater until about halfway through the movie their server lost connection to the host and the movie theater screen suddenly turned into a giant Windows desktop. It was a little unnerving (I had thought I was looking at an actual film).
I think it's something we will just get used to seeing in this increasingly digital age. I just hope I'm not driving down the street one day and see a "lost connection to server" message flashing on a stoplight.
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
I wonder if this was faked like the fireworks?
I used to have a better sig but it broke.
As somebody who has written a bad device driver for Mac OSX I can confirm that a bad driver can and frequently has crashed my OS X kernel.
OS X is based on a microkernel, but in practice it is as monolithic as Linux or BSD.
All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
100% true. NT 3.5 and 3.51 had the video outside the kernel. NT 4.0 moved it to kernel level. This was a big to do at the time, with everyone claiming that NT 4 was going to become unstable that way. Ironically, XP probably wouldn't have been used for projecting graphic images on a ceiling if that change had not been made 2 generations back. Damned if you do, damned if you don't...
>They are covered up well, quickly fixed, or not noticed, but they are there
I learned this when I saw a circus fire and noticed that the clowns put the fire out while making it look like part of the act. It was both comforting and frightening at the same time.
-fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
Definitely. I bought a D-Link USB WiFi adapter, downloaded their official Mac drivers, and the thing crashed my Mac every half hour.
Have you looked at the efforts of the Minix 3 operating system? It's a true microkernel where most drivers run outside of ring0 with limited access to hardware and/or the kernel.
Not just that, but it has stuff in place to severely limit the impact of a rogue driver and can restart dead or dying drivers, not to mention it embraces message passing with interrupts being passed to the driver as low-latency messages.
Other operating systems like QNX implement things in a similar way, although QNX also has guranteed near realtime scheduling and resource allocation allowing the whole system to be partitioned from the development stage.