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windowsonwindows

@windowsonwindows@mas.to

The YouTube channel on the history & development of #Microsoft #Windows. 📺 Join the Discord @ dsc.gg/wowserv! 👨🏻‍💻 Follow for daily Windows facts. 🤓 #WIMVP

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VoteNow was an app found in various development builds of Windows Vista (2006). First seen in build 4033, from 17th July 2003, it was designed to allow testers to quickly & easily submit feedback on builds. Each build’s feedback was logged on its own page on Microsoft’s intranet.

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Olive Green is one of three colour schemes for Windows XP’s (2001) visual style, Luna. Based around various shades of green (hence its name 🫒), it was introduced in build 2474 from May 2001, in which it was referred to by the earlier name of Homestead.

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Bubbles is a screensaver introduced in Windows Vista (2006). It shows bubbles of various colours that move around the screen in front of the user’s desktop. It is one of a few screensavers still included by default in Windows 11 (2021). 🫧

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Windows 7 (2009) shipped with 7 (get it?) Aero themes: Windows 7, Architecture, Characters, Landscapes, Nature, Scenes & a region-dependent theme (e.g. United Kingdom for copies sold in the UK). Each contained a selection of wallpapers & sounds. Which was your favourite? 🖼️🎶

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Windows 1 (1985) included an analogue clock app to show users the time. Simply called Clock, a digital mode was added in Windows 3 (1990). In Windows 95 (1995), its function was absorbed into the Notification Area in the new Taskbar. It last appeared in Windows NT 4 (1996). ⏰

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Before the Start menu & Taskbar, the Windows 95 (1995) team tested this UI. They found users had issues deciding what each button on the Taskbar (at this point called the Tray) did. E.g. to search Help, do you go to Find or Help? 😵‍💫 Did they make the right call scrapping this? 👀

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Windows Vista (2006) added a search box to the Start menu. This let users type to search instantly on opening the menu. Previously, users needed to click a Search option within Start to launch the Search UI first. Typing to search in Start still exists as of Windows 11 (2021).

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Upon its release, Windows XP (2001) received critical acclaim. CNET described it as "worth the hype" & PC Magazine noted improved boot times over its predecessors, Windows 2000 (1999) & ME (2000). But its new visual style - Luna - was criticised by some, calling it “childish”.

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It’s Eurovision day! And in 2004, the EU ruled Microsoft broke European law by “abusing its monopoly to hurt competing video & audio apps”. They were fined €500m & had to offer a Windows edition sans video & audio apps. The 1st such edition - Windows XP Edition N - came in 2005.

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Windows Vista moment. 🧭✨🤩

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Windows Codename Blackcomb was the planned successor to Windows XP (2001). When it fell behind schedule, Microsoft began work on a smaller, interim release: Windows Codename Longhorn. It’d acquire many features intended for Blackcomb, before its release as Windows Vista in 2006.

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On 15th July 2015, Microsoft released Windows 10. Its successor - Windows 11 - arrived almost 6 years later, on 24th June 2021. This has been the longest time span ever between Windows releases, second only to the gap between XP (24th August 2001) & Vista (8th November 2006). ⏳

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Windows has shipped with 3 main GUIs (or shells). The first was Windows 1’s (1985) text-based MS-DOS Executive. This was replaced in Windows 3 (1990) by the icon-based Program Manager. Later, Windows 95 (1995) debuted Explorer, which included the famous Start Menu & Taskbar. 💪

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With the success of Windows 3 (1990), video tutorials for new Windows users became extremely popular. The Windows 3.1 Software Learning Video featured an introduction by Bill Gates himself, proclaiming excitedly that "in this video you are going to see the future - Windows." 📼🪟

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This was the original design for the Windows 8 (2012) logo. 👀 Director of Program Management for the Windows 8 User Experience, @jensenharris, explained that the now-familiar lines were added as “we didn’t think we could get trademark protection for a simple solid trapezoid”.

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My TV & Movies is a cancelled app meant for watching & recording TV. It was present in the Media Centre Edition variants of some Windows Vista (2006) - a.k.a. Codename Longhorn - development builds, between build 3706 (29th October 2002) & build 4029 (29th June 2003). 📺🔴

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Microsoft has accidentally released several Windows development builds over the years, mainly via the Windows Insider Program. A notable e.g. is Windows 10 build 18947, that went to the Fast Ring on 24th July 2019 & featured an early version of Windows 11’s (2021) new Start menu.

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Windows 95 build 428, from 17th March 1995, includes near-final versions of its famous Safe To Shutdown screens. They use the font Franklin Gothic (the same as the Windows wordmark at the time), rather than (what appears to be) a modified version of Grandison in the final design.

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Windows Codename Longhorn build 4093, from 19th August 2004, is the last available build of what would become Windows Vista (2006) before its infamous “development reset”. It contains many prototype features that were either vastly reworked for Vista, or scrapped altogether. 👀

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Windows .Net & Windows 2002 were alternative names considered for Windows Server 2003 (2003) - the server counterpart of Windows XP (2001). This was the first server edition of Windows to receive a different major name compared to its workstation (i.e. non-server) equivalent. 👀

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Windows XP’s (2001) branding wallpaper (simply called “Windows XP”) shows the Windows wordmark on a coloured background of a 3D rendered Windows logo. Designed by studio REZN8, the colour was edition-dependent & included a variant for XP’s server counterpart, Windows Server 2003.

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Windows Vista dropped the word “Start” from the Start button. But, it may never have been there at all. Derek Hoiem, who worked on usability testing for Start, explained: “One thing that became controversial was whether or not to put the word “Start” next to the Windows logo.” 👀

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The Windows 95 Usability Testing Builds are the earliest known builds of Windows 95. They are shown in a Microsoft video demonstrating part of the usability testing process for Windows 95, from late 1992/early 1993. They showcase an early taskbar with no clock or Start button.

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If Windows ever had an identity crisis, it was Windows NT 3.1 build 196. Compiled in September 1991, the CD for this build featured 3 different logos, & the build itself identifies in various places as either NT 1, NT 32-bit Windows, NT-386, NT Windows or Windows NT Version 3. 😵‍💫

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