In WindowsNt and WindowsTwoThousand, a post-mortem dump so named for its background color. Commonly referred to as a "Bee-sod." Windows NT crashed. I am the Blue Screen of Death. No one hears your screams. -- Peter Rothman Old joke: A: Windows NT doesn't have nag screens. B: Then what are these blue things that keep popping up? ---- Or change the color to whatever you want (within the old standard 16 choices). Edit ''system.ini'' and add 2 lines to the [386enh] section: M''''''essageBackColor=2 M''''''essageTextColor=C The above example results in a bright red on green BSOD. 0 = black 1 = blue 2 = green 3 = cyan 4 = red 5 = magenta 6 = yellow/brown 7 = white 8 = gray 9 = bright blue A = bright green B = bright cyan C = bright red D = bright magenta E = bright yellow F = bright white ---- Ad space on the BlueScreenOfDeath is a business opportunity that MicrosoftCorporation has yet to exploit. I wonder what AppleComputer would pay? The BlueScreenOfDeath was also a rollicking good YearTwoThousand story by PeterMerel. Try http://home.san.rr.com/merel/bs.html --- ''Link goes to a "we kicked this user off last week" page, please update''