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August 27th, 2004, 11:58 AM
#16
Speaking of Colors. I haven't had a use for or tried the following:
Change color of BSOD
Edit the SYSTEM.INI file in the Windows directory:
In the [386Enh] add the entries:
MessageTextCOLOR=X
MessageBackCOLOR=X
Where X is replace by the number for each of the following colours:
Black = 0, Blue = 1, Green = 2, Cyan = 3, Red = 4, Magenta = 5, Yellow/Brown = 6
White = 7, Grey = 8, Bright Blue = 9, Bright Green = A, Bright Cyan = B, Bright Red = C
Bright Magenta = D, Bright Yellow = E, Bright White = F
If you're happy and you know it......it's your meds.
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August 27th, 2004, 07:15 PM
#17
Well, you could only change it to black or brown.
XFX nForce 680iLT, Intel Core 2 Q6600 2.4GHz, Kentsfield Quad-Core CPU, 4x1G OCZ PC2 6400, XFX GeForce 8600GT Adapter, Realtek HD Audio, Vista Ultimate 64 SP1, SAMSUNG SP 1614C SATA 160GB, Seagate Barracuda SATA 300 320GB, Samsung SH-S162L DL DVD±RW/±R, ACER AL2216W 22" Monitor
Lottery: a tax on people who are bad at math.
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August 27th, 2004, 09:09 PM
#18
testing,
"Green...Green....Grass...of....Hooome" = Tom Jones
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August 27th, 2004, 09:25 PM
#19
Green before SP2. Blue after SP2 here too. Blue is blue. KB
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August 27th, 2004, 09:52 PM
#20
Yep, Home is green and Pro is blue. But as Frebo pointed out, when you install SP2 both Home and Pro have the same boot screen, no 'Home' or 'Pro', and both have blue bars.
Guess MS was in such a rush (like normal) to get this out that they thought something like that didnt matter
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