1. Historical Context & Significance Era: Released circa 2003–2004 (targeting Windows 2000/XP). Vendor: Compuware Corporation (acquired NuMega, the original SoftICE creator). Legacy: The final mature version of DriverStudio before kernel debugging shifted heavily toward WinDbg and hardware-assisted virtualization.
Today, it survives as , preserved in VM images, studied for its elegant IDT/DRx tricks, and remembered as the tool that could single‑step the Windows kernel without a second machine. “Real kernel debugging is done with a blue screen and a PS/2 keyboard.” – SoftICE user mantra, circa 2004.
1. Historical Context & Significance Era: Released circa 2003–2004 (targeting Windows 2000/XP). Vendor: Compuware Corporation (acquired NuMega, the original SoftICE creator). Legacy: The final mature version of DriverStudio before kernel debugging shifted heavily toward WinDbg and hardware-assisted virtualization.
Today, it survives as , preserved in VM images, studied for its elegant IDT/DRx tricks, and remembered as the tool that could single‑step the Windows kernel without a second machine. “Real kernel debugging is done with a blue screen and a PS/2 keyboard.” – SoftICE user mantra, circa 2004. Compuware DriverStudio 3.2 incl. SoftIce 4.3.2