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While running Windows, remove your system SATA disk/ssd and check how it works fine.
Now imagine that instead of human removal the cause is disk controler going crazy sometimes, not definitively. Or it's manufacturer driver is immature and don't have this quicky hardware workaround (disclaimer: all kernel crashes appearing in this comment are fictitious. Any resemblance to real ones, pending or past, is purely coincidental...)
How do you get enough data to discover the root cause?
Plus, please notice that Haiku don't have the resources Microsoft had to wrote its Windows kernel, and still it took a lot of time to reach a mature kernel crash features set. And calling the bluescreen a mature kernel debugger is kinda funny, BTW...
Edited 2012-07-03 09:39 UTC




Member since:
2009-08-18
Windows does it fine. Sorry.