That BSOD isn't from an XP machine.
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The first thing I noticed. I was confused, thinking maybe they had an old XP machine lying around to plug in after the main one failed, but then I read further and it was just a stunt
If it were real the machine would have rebooted for a forced update and taken 45 minutes to complete before it was usable again.
Watching the actual video of the operator with the recovery and save of the video screen, just straight up typing ON YOUR FEET and putting on music--
Genius. A master at work. Give him two raises.
It was a premade video...
Lol, I just went to a Mariners game vs the White Sox (won in extra innings). I love that stadium, and the King Dome before it (rip). I almost never watch baseball on TV, but it's a lot of fun to go in person, especially with the big screen gimmicks.
Funny when companies use M$ for production systems. So unreliable for anything other than secretarial duties and gaming.
So unreliable except for what 98% of the world uses it for?
Nah brah, 100% of the important stuff runs Linux. Do your research.
Use Linux already
RTFA already
Read the fucking annual?
Rim that fucking anus.
Sorry.. what should I do?
Article lawl
Linux has a BSOD kernel panic screen now too sooooooooo
Obviously a stunt.
I mean they indicate as such if you read the article...
You mean, the stunt that they describe in detail in the article?
Obviously.
So obvious in fact that nobody was under any other impression, making this comment essentially a "the sky is blue" kind of thing.
I'm sure they would not entrust such a thing to a Windows OS in reality lol
My friend, have you ever configured an LED signboard before? If not, what you will learn will shock you...
...a lot of these boards are controlled by proprietary chinese software that only functions on Windows XP.... even today.
As to why they don't have a more modern OS connected to a signboard that obviously supports at least VGA and probably HDMI.... I don't know.
This was a prerecorded video, if you did not catch that.
Now that makes more sense.
Well, the BSOD without a reboot should have been the giveaway. The keyboard clicking noises should have been another.
Didn't see a video of it anywhere on the article. Either my browser didn't support or idk.
There's one LED advertisement board in my area that I see pretty often. Nowdays I'd say it shows something it's not supposed to more often than an advertisement.
Previously I've seen BSOD on it a couple of times, but recently a lot. Also "Finish setting up this device" and part of the desktop showing Windows 11 wallpaper.
My guess is someone upgraded it from Windows 10 to 11, and now it works even less.
Video scalers my dude. Proprietary yes, but Chinese is questionable. Crestron, Extron, QSC, all major video products based out of the US, tho I believe only Crestron manufacturers in the US.
I say it and mean it - when the software is in chinese language or has a very broken english translation for an interface...
I think you might just be using cheap shit off of Amazon lol.
So the only products that met the budget actually approved by management.
Because they don't want to change the drivers or have to revalidate the entire system. And if they're not connected to the Internet then it really doesn't matter.