Microsoft is finally ditching its Windows 95-era icons
Microsoft is finally ditching its Windows 95-era icons
Microsoft is finally preparing to refresh its Windows 95-era
icons. The software giant has been slowly improving the icons it uses in
Windows 10, as part of a “sweeping visual rejuvenation” planned for later this
year. We saw a number of new system icons back in March, with new
File Explorer, folder, Recycle Bin, disk drive icons, and more. Microsoft is
now planning to refresh the Windows 95-era icons you still sometimes come
across in Windows 10.
Windows Latest has spotted new
icons for the hibernation mode, networking, memory, floppy drives, and much
more as part of the shell32.dll file in preview versions of Windows 10. This
DLL is a key part of the Windows Shell, which surfaces icons in a variety of
dialog boxes throughout the operating system. It’s also a big reason why Windows
icons have been so inconsistent throughout the years. Microsoft has often
modernized other parts of the OS only for an older app to throw you into a
dialog box with Windows 95-era icons from shell32.dll.
Hopefully this also means Windows will never ask you for a
floppy disk drive when you dig into Device Manager to update a driver. That era
of Windows, along with these old icons, has been well and truly over for more
than a decade now.
All
of this work to improve the consistency of Windows is part of Microsoft’s
design overhaul to Windows 10, codenamed Sun Valley. The visual changes are
expected to appear in the Windows 10 21H2 update that should arrive in October.
Microsoft has not officially detailed its Sun Valley work, but a job listing
earlier this year teased a “sweeping visual
rejuvenation of Windows.”
Microsoft
has so far revealed new system icons for
Windows 10, alongside File Explorer icon improvements, and more colorful Windows 10 icons that
appeared last year. Rounded corners will
also be a big part of Sun Valley, alongside changes to built-in apps and the
Start menu.
We’re
expecting to hear more about Sun Valley at Microsoft’s Build conference later
this month, or as part of a dedicated Windows news
event.
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