- Windows 11 24H2 users have recently experienced a blue screen with death
- These are caused by the recent quumulative updates in March and April
- Microsoft has rushed a solution that will automatically be used for 24h2 PCS
Microsoft has confirmed that Windows 11 24H2 has a problem with Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) crash caused by the latest updates to us and a solution is quickly pushed through.
Those who run the new April update to version 24h2 of Windows 11-or the previous March patch (or the optional update from the end of March, which was the April upgrade in the test)-can encounter these random lock-ups that come with a ‘safe core error’ message.
Windows latest picked up this and also points out that a further error message can be displayed (‘Critical Process Dead’), but whatever the exact taste of this accident you are experiencing, your PC will be frozen as a lump of so much useless ice cream and need reboot to thaw it.
Microsoft has already applied the resolution to this error, as mentioned in the beginning, and this solution is conveniently delivered as a known problem rollback or kir. What this means is that the cure is automatically led to your Windows 11 -PC and you don’t have to do anything.
However, it may take some time as Microsoft explains, and there may be up to a 24-hour wait for rollback when your machine (and fine-tune it, so the blue screen goes down is no longer a problem).
Analysis: An emergency solution before the full solution
While this bug first crawled into the inner function of Windows 11 with the March update (over a month ago) in 24h2, apparently it was only this month’s April update that Glitch began to affect a wider range of users, Windows latest us. Therefore, this error then appeared more firmly on Microsoft’s radar, and the company got a solution quickly in place (which probably indicates that this must have been a fairly widespread error to get such a quick reaction).
As noted, you may have to wait a while for the correction to be used automatically for your Windows 11 system, but it has probably come through at this point. If not, Microsoft suggests rebooting your PC can get Windows 11 to find the Kir -Plaster and grab it, so it’s worth a vertebra.
You should also remember that this is not the full solution as Kir just disables the problem that caused some of the recent Windows 11 updates (Microsoft does not clarify what it is). A “final resolution” comes – one that can be reintroduced, no matter what change made in the original updates, minus the blue screen – Wall (hopefully) – and Microsoft says it will be part of a Windows update in the future.
April -Plastered to Windows 11 24H2 has also caused headaches elsewhere, primarily because of the appearance of a mysterious folder that is actually part of a security fix (in a very strange way). Those who deleted the empty folder, which seemed like a harmless enough course of action for some, have been asked to put it back on no uncertain terms.