- Windows 11 24h2 users have recently experimening the blue screen of the death blockages
- These have been caused by the recent cumulative updates of March and April
- Microsoft has hurried a solution that will be applied to 24h2 PC automatically
Microsoft has confirmed that Windows 11 24h2 has a problem with blue death screen locks (BSOD) caused by the latest updates for the operating system, and a solution has been pressed.
Those who execute the new April update for the 24h2 version of Windows 11, or the previous March patch (or the optional update since the end of March, which was the April update in the tests), you can find these random blockages that come with a message of ‘safe Kernel error’.
Windows last picked up this and also points out that an additional error message can be shown (‘Critical process died’), but whatever the exact flavor of this accident that experiences, its PC will freeze as a lump of so much useless ice, and will need to restart it to defrost.
Microsoft has already applied the resolution for this error, as mentioned from the beginning, and that solution is conveniently delivered as a known problem or Kir. What this means is that the cure will be released to its Windows 11 PC automatically, and does not have to do anything.
However, you can take a little time, as Microsoft explains, and there may be a wait for until 24 hours for reversion to reach your machine (and adjust it so that the blue screen blocks are no longer a problem).
Analysis: an emergency solution before the complete solution
While this error was dragged for the first time in the internal operation of Windows 11 with the March update (more than a month ago) for 24h2, it was not apparently until the April update of this month that the fault began to affect a lighter range of users, Windows Latest informs us. Therefore, this error appeared more firmly in the Radar of Microsoft and the company obtained a solution quickly rapidly (which probably indicates that it must have been a fairly frequent error, to obtain such a quick response).
As noted, you may have to wait a little for the solution to apply automatically to your Windows 11 system, but it is likely to have passed at this time. Otherwise, Microsoft suggests that restarting its PC can incorporate Windows 11 to find the Kir patch and grab it, so it is worth a turn.
You must also keep in mind that this is not the complete solution, since Kir only disables the part that causes the problem of recent Windows 11 updates (Microsoft does not clarify what it is). A “final resolution” is approaching, one that will enable any change in the original updates, except the nonsense of the blue screen (hopefully), and Microsoft says it will be part of a Windows update in the future.
The April patch for Windows 11 24h2 has also been causing headaches in other places, mainly due to the appearance of a mysterious folder that is actually part of a security solution (very strangely). Those who eliminated the empty folder, which looked like a course of action harmless to some, have been advised to put it again in unequivocal terms.