- Windows 11 24H2 users have recently experienced a blue died screen
- These were caused by recent cumulative updates in March and April
- Microsoft has rushed to a correction that will be applied automatically to 24H2 PCs
Microsoft has confirmed that Windows 11 24H2 has a problem with the blue screen accidents (BSOD) caused by the latest updates for the operating system, and a fix has been pushed in a hurry.
Those who perform the new April update for the 24H2 version of Windows 11 – or the previous March correction (or the optional update of the end of March, which was the April upgrade in the tests) – may meet these random locks which are delivered with a message “ error of the secure kernel ”.
Windows the last has resumed this and also underlines that another error message can be displayed (“ Critique process is dead ”), but whatever the exact flavor of this accident you feel, your PC will be frozen as a piece of so useless ice and will have to restart to thaw.
Microsoft has already applied the resolution of this bug, as mentioned at the start, and this corrective is conveniently delivered as a known Rollback or Kir. This means that the remedy will be automatically killed on your Windows 11 PC, and you have nothing to do.
However, this can take a little time, as Microsoft explains, and there can be up to a 24 -hour waiting for the hindsight to reach your machine (and modify it so that the accidents of the blue screen are no longer a problem).
Analysis: an emergency solution before the full solution
Although this bug first brought back in the internal operation of Windows 11 with the March update (over a month ago) for 24h2, it is apparently not before the April update of this month that the problem began to affect a wider range of users, Windows informs us the last. Consequently, this bug then appeared more firmly on Microsoft’s radar and the company quickly obtained a corrective in place (which probably indicates that it should be a fairly common bug, to obtain such a quick response).
As indicated, you may have to wait a little time for the fix to automatically applied to your Windows 11 system, but it is likely to have passed at this stage. Otherwise, Microsoft suggests that restarting your PC can invite Windows 11 to find the Kir patch and catch it, which is worth swirling.
You should also keep in mind that this is not the full fix, because the Kir simply deactivates the part that bears the problem of recent Windows 11 updates (Microsoft does not clarify what it is). A “final resolution” arrives – the one that will reorganize any change in the original updates, less the nonsense of the blue screen (hopefully) – and Microsoft says that this will be part of a Windows update in the future.
The April Patch for Windows 11 24H2 also caused headache elsewhere, mainly due to the appearance of a mysterious file which is in fact part of a security correction (in a very strange way). Those who deleted the empty file, which seemed to be a fairly harmless conduct for some, were invited to put it back in uncertain terms.