1 point

It is not informative yet, but I like that it’s blue. It’s a quite recognizable color. Windows made it recognizable by having a lot of BSODs. People are asking why it couldn’t be just black, but with non-black BSOD one can recognize it instantly without reading the text.

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1 point

Just for reference, a few years back, (ex-Microsoft) David Plummer had this historical dive into the (MIPS) origin of the blue color, and how Windows is not blue anymore: https://youtu.be/KgqJJECQQH0?t=780

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1 point

A QR code created from the actual fault text would be super helpful. That way we can scan it and get the full error message (details and all) on another device without having to snap a picture or something. But not like windows does it, where it’s a link to a defunct page. I’m taking about the actual text transcoded into a QR code.

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1 point
*

I believe the main contributor for drm_panic wants to add one eventually. Here’s what it might look like:

https://gitlab.com/kdj0c/panic_report/-/issues/1

Link if you can’t scan

Also it looks like the colours are configurable at compile time (with white on black default).

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1 point

Ah man, I was hoping I’d be rickrolled

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1 point

This looks EXACTLY as I imagined!

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1 point

And windows shows it for a few seconds, never enough time to pick the phone.

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0 points

You have to disable auto reboot on bsod

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1 point

This should be the default option when the blue screen happened, giving users chance to scan the QR and find out about the causes before they can try restarting their PC

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1 point

Reminds me of my Windows XP days when I used to customise the hell out of everything I could… custom boot screen… and yes custom BSOD. Which I switched to red 🟥❗ One day my PC RSODs in front of a family member and he said, “Oh shit, that must be really bad if it’s red instead of blue!” 😂

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2 points

VMware went with Purple for their hypervisors so you get a PSOD instead. Always was fun when you’d hit the console for a server and get greeted by that instead of the yellow and black split screen.

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0 points

What’s DRM in this context? Surely linux kernel doesn’t do digital rights management?

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1 point

Direct Rendering Manager

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1 point

DRM came before DRM

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1 point

Actually there is DRM in the kernel thanks to the HDMI blobs.

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1 point

Fuck HDMI. The committee makes doing custom hardware near impossible unless you’re a mega corp

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1 point

It was made by Hollywood for Hollywood.

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1 point

Direct Rendering Manager. Part of Linux kernel to communicate with GPUs.

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