BlueScreenView
License Key
KQQW3-G1A78-OGVZ6-THVBN-8RR8AWCVY8-OU0W8-3DWI8-ZBW9C-JTP6S
UX34G-F8MLZ-AKR16-M8PUP-1ER2G
MUH3P-98U22-XUI08-HAQ39-SBCQI
Activation Key
DV5UE-56VV1-PAJXL-E1Q5Z-WCKDMJ0FZ7-5YWUR-7Z377-D21XO-EVRMW
YVRK4-XRA0G-5MUB6-RT4FK-JNJ17
BPZXP-LXG1H-7S4CK-P62NF-NWSIZ
Key Download
BU5I5-T07YA-STN7J-CV26Z-KY79Y2QT5I-3L4FN-RE7ZK-21TSR-V95RX
MNB6E-N8NGJ-1I91U-R59OD-KSYLN
3YYL1-O7KPX-0IFTY-0WPY6-9R60P
Crack Key
OGN49-10KZM-UWDBN-M8RK1-G3NSSB75FE-M24P4-FV9OS-XWMZR-NM3EX
LYE0X-TEZE3-M53WM-GQX96-YDXZ5
I8WM3-ISX7K-7AFW0-OCUFK-1PWZF
Keygen
UW0E-9IV9F-MC9RI-BJM71-TKMJM2F2CR-2EFZ9-915H8-76D7W-AJMR3
VINV0-7P8H0-TVS5A-XBWP0-DT0R8
D88OF-VD5C5-9ZLG1-O5Z00-GGOA9
License Keygen
PRQW8-SVMPS-12VZE-R3YBD-5GV261YQD4-ID8A3-5BYJL-GR882-IG1GU
DJ5KD-RPGJ8-GZXF1-TYL8B-MDSV1
X17IW-WR8ZK-QIRLZ-VSTN5-03J2O
Serial Key
1MFJP-HM9CT-Q4MS5-VXEYD-6I98HBGVNB-B382D-0QKXB-UIHEY-JI4H1
LSN0V-IQDQ6-4IB7C-35G4G-8RQ8N
7H0J4-7O7D2-FCY9U-AYGRO-UOVC8
License Number
8MCJR-UWA0B-0RYSA-CCC0I-55JGNM76JR-L78W8-4T8DS-FEFTB-RW3UN
S24LI-H60F1-BXBYI-2RER8-NFV2A
KR3Z6-YHWEK-5WEDK-PSH7T-P6BER
Crack Full Key
3STQE-3QI6Y-P0SR9-YFA95-99T9OVI6R5-AVASU-SMLKC-1J27G-EW9X2
PMXNG-Z4OM8-GILFG-G7E5G-NN8UM
L2NLY-33J71-DNQNE-25UGA-SV5XE
Product Key
G6RY4-A4YST-7XKMH-RW5KW-KP8BRBIV5K-GPH2Y-VCNXX-1GBIM-PPS76
9ECQO-VC6VT-4ABSD-4LOCX-54UK7
VVL1L-R10WF-CURRF-OGQPT-7995P
Registration Key
XZDQE-U2G6B-4RBKJ-Z5ZKP-ZXZ78E029B-Y7NFS-SHLMQ-7P3XD-TXPML
CB4Y7-63OK4-PTLCK-U7414-Z4550
QC9TW-OYI6A-A4G86-0089L-3RAI1
Blue Screen of Death: the very name chills the hearts of Windows users who have experienced it. There’s no feeling quite like seeing your work vanish and be replaced by a BSOD, which is Windows’ way of telling you it has just crashed, taking whatever you had open with it. NirSoft’s BlueScreenView is a kind of coroner’s report on your system. It scans the minidump files created when your system crashes and displays a BSOD, collecting them all in a single list view displaying all kinds of information you can use to debug whatever it is that’s crashing your computer in the first place. (And if you knew that, you wouldn’t need BlueScreenView, would you?) Like other NirSoft tools, BlueScreenView is freeware.
BlueScreenView automatically scans your system’s minidump files as soon as you start it, though you can refresh the program while it’s running. BlueScreenView’s user interface is divided horizontally into two list views: an upper window displaying Dump Files and a lower pane for displaying each file’s contents. We could rearrange the column headings by dragging them and add or remove headings with the Choose Columns tool on the View menu. We could also add grid lines to the view, mark odd and even rows, generate HTML reports, and save data. We could open a properties sheet for individual entries or right-click to access a more extensive menu of choices, including copy and delete options. The Options menu includes a Lower Pane Mode menu that let us specify what data is shown in the bottom window, including raw data DumpChk Output, All Drivers, and other options.
Better still (or worse, depending on how you feel about it), BlueScreenView also displays a simulated Blue Screen Of Death that closely resembles the actual Windows BSOD in the lower pane. The program’s main view displays the Bug Check Code and four parameters as well as other data that makes it easy to track down the offending driver or module. BlueScreenView clearly isn’t for beginners, but coders and power users will appreciate the way it collects and presents crash data in one easy-to-use tool.
- Added Drag & Drop support: You can now drag a single MiniDump file from Explorer into the main window of BlueScreenView.
- Fixed bug: BlueScreenView failed to remember the last size/position of the main window if it was not located in the primary monitor.
BlueScreenView scans all your minidump files created during ‘blue screen of death’ crashes, and displays the information about all crashes in one table. For each crash, BlueScreenView displays the minidump filename, the date/time of the crash, the basic crash information displayed in the blue screen (Bug Check Code and four parameters), and the details of the driver or module that possibly caused the crash (filename, product name, file description, and file version). For each crash displayed in the upper pane, you can view the details of the device drivers loaded during the crash in the lower pane. BlueScreenView also mark the drivers that their addresses found in the crash stack, so you can easily locate the suspected drivers that possibly caused the crash.