All processors in this bracket are less prone to common issues found in the typical 1155-socket cpus such as random app crashes or BSOD.
FUDdy FUD FUD. First, they're almost non-existent, today--the 80s and 90s are over with. Second, no source of crash or BSOD will be any different on an LGA2011 i7 than on any other socket. If you're lucky enough that whatever is at fault shows itself as single-bit memory errors, you might get some warning with a Xeon, but that will require the right chipset, the right bad components failing the right way, and to get that, you'll need good luck.
x86 CPUs and chipsets today are quite reliable across-the-board.
No stability issues are commonly found on any platform, without bad drivers or bad components.
If you encounter any, troubleshoot them. There are good reasons to pay for RAS features in the likes of Xeons and Opterons, but the idea that a PC won't happily go about years of operation without crashes or other problems is a severe misconception, whose days of truth are now long gone. I have fond memories of those days, but our hardware was total crap, and our OSes were, too.