Happy Birthday, Windows 95



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Bill Gates introduced Windows 95 that day in 1995. According to Getty,

Bill Gates introduced Windows 95 that day in 1995. According to Getty, “the presentation, which included software demonstrations and a carnival, brought together 500 journalists, 2,000 guests and 9,000 Microsoft employees.”
Photo: AFP / Stringer (Getty Images)

To date, Windows 95, the first of the “modern” Microsoft operating systems, is a quarter of a century old. Happy birthday my old friend.

We could of course take this opportunity to tell about the myriad of features of 95 that would become staples of future Windows: the huge graphical improvements over version 3.1, the start button and taskbar, file shortcuts, plug-and-play device detection. . Or we could lyrically say how much of my childhood was spent on a 20 pound CRT monitor. Despite the end of support almost 20 years ago, Windows 95 continues to persist in the wild (although we don’t recommend running it for anything other than maybe a retro gaming PC.)

Scratch it all off though. It’s not a birthday party without a song, and Windows 95 just happens to be one of the best, composed by the incomparable Brian Eno:

God who feels good to hear again.

Dear reader, may the sound of nostalgia bring you peace.

Fixed: “Bliss” wallpaper was in stock for Windows XP, which Windows 95 is not.

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