Something about the visuals of the old Windows versions is making it so beautiful and well ordered at the same time. There is no real visual bloat which distracts you too much like nowadays.
U to vreme grafika nije imala tu i takvu ulogu kao što je ima danas.Mada kad se setim tog vremena prelazak sa 16bit ne grafičke verzije na 32 bitnu delovalo je skoro pa nestvarno u vizuelnom smislu ☺
They started stripping and blocking stuff after win98se. Before that anything seemed like a technological advancememt. Aftrr w98se for me windows is not anymore a technology update but traditional monopoly.
You clearly never had someone run ping -l 65535 on your IP address Also clear into Windows 98 there was a memory leak in explorer.exe that would eventually crash any system left online.
@@Lilithe until ~win7 the i know there was ie memory crear problem, which doesnt erase alloxated memory even on lots of different clearing ways, so after lots of memory allocations from js it simply goes out of memory which in general system is stuck or not responsive.
Yeah, it sucked. Having to name everything FILES~01.DOC. Good luck finding the file you're looking for. Imagine how many times people accidentally overwrote important files by making a tiny mistake.
MISTAKE - left here for reference - Long file name support together with 'big' hard disk support, IE anything over 1.2Gb (I think it was 1.2 GB) and some other bits came with Win 3.11 (aka wfw) it it was originally sold as an office / work environment add on. NEW TEXT FOLLOWS - I apologize. I believe I may have confused win 3.11 with NT 3.1. My first PC was a second hand machine that had been used a computer OEM's office. I only had the OS for about a week before I was given the promised Win 95 CD. Itis strange how things get fixed in your mind till you yourself believe them true.
So many good memories with this OS. Everything was precious including listening music in winamp, downloading 3-5MB mp3 files via 5kbps dial-up connections, exchanging game CD’s with friends and playing Red Alert, Duke Nukem, Warcraft and so many others.. Good old days..
I was far too young at the time to interpret what OS was what, but this video made me realize that I had some tiny degree of experience with windows 3.1. It was an old tossed PC that I found on the curb as a kid. Then I forgot how much I actually did use win95, until I heard the boot sound @ 6:55 Holy crap, did that open some ancient memories.
Dan your the man.. You just took me back to thinking my time being at secondary school omg lol coming to my secondary school all the computers would have be booked hourly slots man they were the days. Life was good back then thank you mate
I'm feeling so nostalgic! I still vividly remember attending the local official Microsoft 95 launch at the Grand Hotel in Calcutta, India. I worked in the IT department of a local company back then and was so excited to get my hands on a copy of Win95. I've still got the launch T-Shirt somewhere!
Cesare Vesdani windows never looked great, but I get what you mean. ;) it was nice to experience many of the features win95 brought at that time. Today, we like it for its nostalgic feeling.
Faldegast I really appreciate your through and analytical answer. Especially, the fact that you brought up the subject of Linux experience with different DEs or WMs. Yes, I agree with the point that at that time at Microsoft they put effort in R&D to deliver a more scientific implementation of human interactions mechanics (e.g. UI or games like minesweeper, Freecell etc.) even introduce us to the GUI and new ways of interfacing with computers as every day tools (for ex. using the mouse) . But there were many issues too. Ranging from performance issues to how different developers reacted to the new graphical environment. (I know it’s not totally Microsoft ‘s fault but it impacted the overall UX heavily.) Finally, I’m so happy that you have transitioned to Linux (POSIX) world too. I did the same last year (moved from Mac to Linux) and had a whole year of adventure and discovery. Btw, I really like to move to FreeBSD but it’s not as simple as moving to GNU/Linux world - mainly because if their policies that are in favour of an enterprise-level usage and some limitations on DRM content accessibility. Bests.
Windows 95 gives me strong nostalgia. Rearranging and organizing the folders in the Start menu, the flying paper animation while moving and copying files, Space Pinball, playing the stock MIDI files (Brandenburg Concerto), the wizards, yellow tooltips, the window style, the sky behind the logo...
This video brought back so many memories of my childhood it wasnt even funny, thank you so much for making a 25yr tribute, it really made me good remembering the good old days. Here's hoping we get another os just as memorable as win 95
The "Weezer fan" at Microsoft was actually Bill Gates himself. I don't remember how I learned that but it was a fun thing to make fun at when I was 16.
@@smitajky it came along with the PC our family bought at the time. this was just before Windows XP was released unfortunately, so XP just wasnt available yet. Needless to say we went and bought it later on. I still remember how those ppl we bought XP from tried to convince us that perhaps we should buy brand new PC instead, even when the problem clearly wasnt with our brand new PC, but because ME was so fucking unstable and piss poor operating system.
The little drumsticks hitting a red and white drum -- "waiting" animation -- evidently started in Chicago at least, and lasted a very very ling time afterwards.
Your Windows 95 version is either OSR 2.5 or you installed Internet Explorer 4.0's Shell UI and Active Desktop feature. The huge "My Computer" left pane text was introduced by IE 4 (which OSR 2.5 installs). This wasn't present on Windows 95's original version. (I thought it ruined an otherwise extremely functional shell, even if I was on the team that produced it.)
yes :) I hated 98 because of that integrated IE in to GUI, but fortunately there is a 98 lite that can remove this crap and use original 95 GUI, but unfortunately many program refuse to work with 95 shell forced to 98 www.litepc.com/98lite.html
Ok, so that explains why it looks so weirdly. Curiously enough - I never saw it like that, maybe because IE4 wasn't really needed given that Internet was very expensive in my area at the time. And yes! Windows 95 shell was great, and Win 98 (and XP later) destroyed it with this IE-like style of file exploring.
I was disappointed that he didn't go into detail on the specific version he was using. If he added IE4 (I don't remember if that was included in Plus!) to Win95A, then he really screwed up, it really did some weird things to the OS and I warned people to never install it. Oh, I think IE3 was included in Plus! The original IE was pretty much unusable as a browser. Or there was Win95B OSR2 - without IE4 or With IE4 (Win95D I think?), but were not retail and could only be purchased installed (OEM) on a new computer (part) or you worked at a computer store. Installing IE4 on that basically just turned it into Win98 with inferior USB support. Basically, the only version that was ever worth a shit was 95B OSR2 (without IE4) or XP SP1 (or 2, original XP was bundled with the messenger exploit). Win95A had some serious problem that I don't remember now, something to do with long file name support or something, but forced me to "illegally" install the B version. I never had to use 98 and never had to deal with the IE4 integration. It was right from 95 to XP and then to Win7 and it stops there. Oh, and I don't remember looking at the "With Internet Explorer" every day on my computer, or the Outlook Express was certainly never there on my desktop. But I think that actually came with Office at some point, so that's probably how it got installed. Point is, really, if you want to see what Windows 95 can do, you got to go with 95B even if it was never "official" - it was included on new computers for a couple years.
I was at the Phoenix launch event in 1995 and got a "I was There at the START" sun shade for my car. I used it for over 10 years... This was finally an operating system that was as useful as my Amiga that I had used for 7 years before that. Microsoft finally caught up...
Thanks so much for the RetroZilla tip, Dan. As much as I love my Win 95 installation, lack of TLS support has been maddeningly frustrating. You've made my day. Gonna go try it now. Also, of note. Microsoft removed the Buddy Holly video from subsequent release CDs (OSR 2.x etc). Goodtimes is still there though. Their licensing agreement with Weezer's label must have run out. Sad.
Windows 95 allows the use of the parallel port; windows 10 doesn’t. That’s why so many old CNC machines still run on computers with insanely outdated operating systems.
@@among-us-99999 True, and my company has one real old CNC machine with a Commodore Computer only 1 man can repair, and that is the engineer who build it in 1985. That machine is nearly as old as me and works quite well.
💿 Great video, mate cheers!!! I remember getting 95 as it opened up a whole new world of gaming! I think i clogged my hard drive up in 2 days with all the cover cds from the magazines lol, aaahhh those were the days 💿
Hey Dan, I was still using an A1200 PowerPC right up until 1997/98. I skipped all the fun of Win95 and went straight to Win98 with Unreal 1 and Fallout 1. Miss the old days. Thanks for the awesome video!
Fantastic video, Dan and special memories, so thank you! I remember my dad and I going into a computer store (in St Albans, Herts UK?) around release time. The shop was packed and the buzz around Windows 95 was incredible. They were demo'ing the programme, it looked impressive so we enquired about it. We owned a 386 (33mhz) PC with 4mb of RAM and were told by the salesman it would struggle to run on our computer!! Top marks for his honesty!
Dan, that ISO for Adobe Premiere 5.1 is for the Macintosh. I'm downloading 4.2 to see if that's Windoze 95 compatible and will update if it is - keep up the good work👍
I was just a kid, but i remember using DOS to run my games. When my dad brought this home, my mind EXPLODED. I had no idea who had to sell there soul to create such a beautiful thing, but i was thankful. Great video. Really took me back.
Those were the days! I remember my computer company that dealt with “legacy” IBM iron mostly. We got a job with installing a PC network on a near by university campus and roping all these discreet IBM clones to an Ethernet topology using NT servers and Windows 95 clients. It was truly a fun gig. I remember my socks getting literally blown off as this campus was part of the internet backbone. My office alone were still on a stupid 96K dial-up.
Windows versions are like layers, every icon is still in the system files that have not changed, I found the style of 3.1 not just on moricons.dll, but on various libs. Same you can find XP styled icons, mydocs from windows 2000, some hardware drivers and control panels packing win7 /vista icons. and that jdbgmgr.exe bear. always there, for some reason I'm leaving it alone.
At 2:22 “full preemptive multitasking” is an incorrect statement. Windows 95 used cooperative multitasking along with all Win9x’s and WinMe, only Windows NT and then Windows 2000 finally merged the win95 desktop with full preemptive multitasking. Thanks for the video!
I remember having my windows 3.11 computer back in the 90s. One weekend I was visiting the family property north of Rockhampton. For whatever reason I was poking around in the family car and under the front seat was a sealed boxed copy of Windows 95. I was instantly excited for my computing future when I found it.
I'm from Mexico City. I also was an amiga user at that moment. A2000 with a GVP 68030 accelerator and hard drive. By Jan '96 I switched to W95. I always wanted a Next machine, because I wanted true UNIX. By 2003 My dream came true, albeit as the newly released OS X 10.2.7 Jaguar. Never looked back.
Personally, I'll always have a soft spot for Windows 3.1 / 3.11. As a kid playing games on my Aunt's computer in the early 90's, MS-DOS and Windows pre-95 was my window to a whole bunch of fun. Good times!
I did not have a CD drive when i first ran windows 95, i installed with 1.44 3.5 floppy drives. was an adventure to say the least. took for ever to install.
Not only that it was huge it was slow as snailS and the wosrt part is if you of the floppy disks fail to broke well tough luck because You will stuck in limbo as results most people created backups to prevent that.
I have a lot of memories of Windows 95. I did phone support for Win9x for a Microsoft outsourcer. Cracks me up that TCP/IP wasn't even installed by default.
• 8:40 - And the MSN CD had a copy of Edie Brickell's "Good Times" music-video, as well as a custom video of a bespoke song for MSN. These music-videos were amazing back then. How quaint it seems now that technology has blasted so far ahead. • 10:25 - 😂 Bill's face speaks volumes: "Sure… 👀 Maybe I should look more into it if even a talk-show host is talking about it. 🤔" • 12:05 - Bill's face speaks volumes again: "oh crap, oh crap, oh crap! I can't believe this is really happening! oh crap, oh crap!" • 18:25 - Now do it with Arachne for DOS… • 19:19 - I remember sitting on my bed and installing Windows 95 from 153 floppy disks on a 486 with VGA and SB which was a big upgrade from our previous 286 Tandy. Seeing that blue-purple bubble background when it was done was a thrill.
Windows 95 was my first Windows and has a special place in my heart. Sure I had played with Windows 3.11 at friends and of course i had used MS DOS and other early operating systems. But Windows 95 was the first time I was truly fascinated. I only regret not having tried Mac OS earlier. I started late with OSX Lion and used both Windows and Mac in parallel until 2020. With the release of macOS 11 Monterey that also came with new Mac hardware (ARM RISC) and Windows having gone in a direction I did not approve, i switched solely to Mac for good.
I learnt programming for business on Windows 95, MS Access, VB6 etc back in 2000, then programmed for office users from 2000 until 2017. Most of the OS and Office upgrade I was forced to do to only felt like a re-invention of the wheel as far as what was needed for the average business user, and in fact most programs for business were just broken for the sake of upgrades, and provided earnings for people like me to fix them. Sure personal and specialized computing has gone through the roof compared to then, even what my tablet can do is mind blowing, but the bulk of workers who use these OS's are just doing spreadsheets, making Word Documents and Email as before, and the real work of turning System processes into stable business programs is so great that many programs are still ancient and doing just fine.
Some music producers still do midi sequencing on Windows 95 and older operating systems are also still used in the art and graphics industry. I still have our first Windows PC in the loft, it was originally Windows 95 but was upgraded to Windows 98 following on from it crashing.
This is very interesting! I remember having to re-install early '95 quite often, but 95b was very stable. I think VirtualDubMod, video editing software, might still work on '95.
Windows 95 also introduced support for Com ports higher than 1 - 4. My job back then was to support some DOS tools that used modems and couldn’t handle Packard Bell modems on Com 5 as the DOS program didn’t recognize it. Please buy an external US Robotics modem and plug in via serial port so you can use Com 3 or 4. Fun times with upset customers.
I want to know something else: how did they do all the transitions and video-in-video effects like in the intro starting at 3:00, decades before Adobe After Effects? Was this done on some proprietary video editing systems??
I can remember being back in Primary school back then and going into secondary... and fondly remember using Windows 95 though they slowly had transitioned to NT and Windows 98... and drawing a lot in Paint at the time... Back then having a home computer was hardly unheard of or only those who had the money to buy one... I remember when we bought our first TIME computer back in 1998 think it cost about £500-£600 at the time.
Ahh Windows 95. When I was young, my Father owned a Desktop PC with Windows 95. I have fond memories of playing video games on it. Lego games like Lego Island and Lego Rock Raiders, Age of Empires and Age of Empires II, I Spy CD Roms, and Where in the World is Carmen San Diego? I even enjoyed watching my older brother play games on it. It's been years since I have seen Windows 95. Good work!
It was an ok operating system, but not my favorite. But when it crashed; that thing was a real nightmare, and sometimes made me rip my hair or hit my head.
Agreed. It was unpredictable and it really didn't tell you a lot to go by as to what went wrong. For all you know, even running A program could upset it.
The huge factor for us software devs was being able to use 32-bit flat addressing - instead of the segmented memory addressing of Windows 3.x. But it still sat on top of PC bios, MS-DOS, and to some extent, MS-DOS .sys device drivers (Windows also had some of its own device drivers). None of this code was re-entrant. Once an app made a call that went down into those legacy layers, then an exclusive lock barrier would allow only one thread of code to execute - this was for nearly the entire DOS layer because the code was so prone to inter-dependency side effects. So yeah, you could run multiple apps and even write multi-threaded apps, but the execution model was very granular - especially compared to its big brother, Windows NT. But it had a good 5 year ride before big brother became Windows 2000 and started to displace it on end user computers.
Man I didn't realize its been 25 years. While 95 was on the first computer I used and also on "my" first computer (First I had in my room for myself) Win 95 is also the same age as I am. As far as Windows and I go there are some similarities in how things have changed. Biggest difference is that today I have mostly abandoned Windows. Obviously I have not abandoned my body, that would be weird.
I remember upgrading from Windows 3.11 to 95. It was the most positive OS upgrade for me, back in the days when a new version of an OS was something to look forward to rather than the dread it tends to bring now.
The first time I saw W95 it totally blew my mind, now W8 and W10 is kind of disappointment. Maybe Windows should die and be replaced with something better.
@@danielgomez7236 In my opinion, 8 is better. No damaging updates and less bloatware. ui is kinda inconsistent for new users. also, no candy crush pre-installed.
I could vaguely remember seeing a version with a fully animated Win95 splash screen when I first saw it in a computer shop shortly after release, with the clouds (choppily) scrolling behind the logo. Did this ever exist? It's not the "Welcome to Windows" video.
Me and my family always had a hard time trying to download and then get on the internet back in the day, in the mid-late 90s. Nowadays, its super quick and simple, and like wherever you go the location is expected to have internet.
I remember I was in middle school in 1995, and we had Apple IIe computers lining the room of my first computer class. We were learning how to type (which I already knew how to do). One day, we had a substitute teacher and she played some promotional material and a demo for Windows 95. It was really the first time I felt wowed by what a computer could do. It was the first time I saw a computer with the ability to have photo-quality pictures, audio that wasn't just chiptunes or really poor samples, and video playing - on a home computer! I heard about the internet a few years later, and then... well, my path was set before me. And now I have a copy of the Petzold "Programming Windows 95" book on my desk, and I am learning Win32 and Winsock programming for shits and giggles.
Maybe you will be interested in obscure but very nice little programming language - "Pure Basic". www.purebasic.com/ It's not Visual Basic - it produces very small and fast binaries and fun to program with. I played with it for like 10-20 minutes :-)
Thank you for the look at the beta and for not repeating the - NEW big disk support - NEW long file name support rot. My first PC was a second hand 486DX4 100 with Win 3.11 and 8 mb. Two-three weeks later I was given the promised W95 disk. It crawled. £40 and an extra 16mb and it flew, wow it was fast. Never had the chance to try the internet till 2002 though so it was also good to see that. I've heard of another browser for you K-melon I'm considering that on an net box with 98se once I pull Win7 from the net. Thank you for the video but plesse be less stingy with the allocated redourses.
I've still got. Atari 2600 boxed with games. BBC Model B computer with extras. AtariST with extras. Comadore Amiga 500 Amiga 1200 Panasonic 3DO All boxed. I went over to pc. I still have all cpus, main boards, gfx cards, memory and hard drives from pc's I've built starting at 386sx
@@jonvincentmusic Same here. I also switched to win 95 in 1996 and was shocked at some point how backward the operating system and the system was. What was celebrated as new was standard on the Amiga since 500s. I still remember, I knew DOS through computer courses in school and how much DOS was still hidden under Windows 95 was surprising. I mean I knew this from the Amiga but using it was the exception rather than the rule. I have already forgotten what it was called on the Amiga 😄
The one thing I loved about operating systems back in the day is when it told you when it’s Daylight Savings time and when it changed the clock ahead, instead of the computers doing it automatically nowadays and confusing me.
...and miles ahead of the regular windows versions. Used NT 3.1 up to 4.0 on all my Windows workstations(mostly Alphas and later Xeons) at the time. Somewhat RAM-hungry by comparison, but I never had a single crash or saw a BSOD on those systems. 👍
I actually bought Windows 98SE but ultimately switched to a pirated OEM copy of Windows 2000 pro after finding out that it gave much better performance and built-in features like IIS, NTFS, running on the good 'ol Windows NT kernel. My favorite version of Windows to date
@@fpvm4k3r My all-time favorite version of Windows is Windows 7. However, since it's no longer receiving security patches, I'm sticking with Windows 10.
Nice video, I remember having Windows 95 Demo on Flopy disk, that was amazing, and also Plug and play was a great idea 25 years ago, installing P&P ISA sound card (Sound Blaster clone) was essential for Windows 95
Something about the visuals of the old Windows versions is making it so beautiful and well ordered at the same time. There is no real visual bloat which distracts you too much like nowadays.
exactly
Well...
Try "Linux antiX" just for the same reasons :-)
Mastakilla91 and no ads built in
At least. it doesn’t come candy crush
U to vreme grafika nije imala tu i takvu ulogu kao što je ima danas.Mada kad se setim tog vremena prelazak sa 16bit ne grafičke verzije na 32 bitnu delovalo je skoro pa nestvarno u vizuelnom smislu ☺
Win 95 was a “mind blown” switching from 3.1, Epic times. Never had a problem with 95.
They started stripping and blocking stuff after win98se. Before that anything seemed like a technological advancememt. Aftrr w98se for me windows is not anymore a technology update but traditional monopoly.
You clearly never had someone run ping -l 65535 on your IP address
Also clear into Windows 98 there was a memory leak in explorer.exe that would eventually crash any system left online.
*left on
@@Lilithe until ~win7 the i know there was ie memory crear problem, which doesnt erase alloxated memory even on lots of different clearing ways, so after lots of memory allocations from js it simply goes out of memory which in general system is stuck or not responsive.
Yeah, it was just so perfect... Wish Windows 10 was so good.
Don't forget one of Win95's most important features: long filenames! Can you imagine having only 8 characters for every file on your hard drive?
Yeah, it sucked. Having to name everything FILES~01.DOC. Good luck finding the file you're looking for. Imagine how many times people accidentally overwrote important files by making a tiny mistake.
Also the all new Windows Explorer was totally awesome, the old W3.1 File Manager was a mess.
MISTAKE - left here for reference - Long file name support together with 'big' hard disk support, IE anything over 1.2Gb (I think it was 1.2 GB) and some other bits came with Win 3.11 (aka wfw) it it was originally sold as an office / work environment add on. NEW TEXT FOLLOWS -
I apologize. I believe I may have confused win 3.11 with NT 3.1. My first PC was a second hand machine that had been used a computer OEM's office. I only had the OS for about a week before I was given the promised Win 95 CD. Itis strange how things get fixed in your mind till you yourself believe them true.
Dos sucked so hard it's unbelievable
@@evilgoogleevilgoogle3855 well win 3.11 sucked too and was like something from the 80s.
Dude, an absolute wave of nostalgia hit me with that win95 start up sound. Brings me back to the library in grade school. Great video btw
Its been 25 years and the start up sound is still burned into my head.
Ever wondered how it would sound stretched out to 40× its original duration?
soundcloud.com/ideoforms/windows-95-startup-sound
@@lawrencedoliveiro9104 NNNNNNNNNNNnnnnnnnnnnnnOOOOOOOOOOOOOoooooooooooo
Loved that sound.
@raccoon681 *It's
2020 was a hard year give me a break. :)
Hey i'm glad people still appreciate me!
🤣 old is gold
@@ssldhl Well probably.
I have original floppy disks
You're my first OS. Thank you for my great childhood and sweet memories
WIndows 95 na you are trash
I truly miss the simplicity of the Windows 95/98 era.
Take me back, please!
Windows 95 - XP: My computer
Windows Vista - 8: Computer
Windows 8.1 - 10: This PC
Windows 6.9 - 69: our computer
Fugitifahej :D SOVEIT ANTHEM
same same me....
My dad still calls it 'My computer' lol. He is stuck in 98 era
Windows 69-420: no moar compute
So many good memories with this OS. Everything was precious including listening music in winamp, downloading 3-5MB mp3 files via 5kbps dial-up connections, exchanging game CD’s with friends and playing Red Alert, Duke Nukem, Warcraft and so many others.. Good old days..
I remember playing Quarantine 2 Road Warrior and Diablo 1 on windows 95 when I was 9 😭 I truly took those days for granted. Life was so much simpler
Don't forget Legends of Kesmai, Magestorm, Splatterball, Darkness Falls
Great video!
Top 10 comments I was not expecting to see under this video
I Love your videos!
The time when everything was named "Something 2000" just to sound modern and high tech.. :D
"Windows 2000 Professional"
"Office 2000 Premium"
"Norton AntiVirus 2000"
"Cool Edit 2000"
"CircuitMaker 2000"
I think I know what you mean!
But then 3000 comes and it sounds futuristic...
Gateway 2000
Top Gear 3000 ...hey it's a 1995 game!
And also Dune 2000 from 1998.
Cartoons taught me they used '3000' after the year 1999. '4000' would be too much of a stretch and unrealistic, let's be real
I was far too young at the time to interpret what OS was what, but this video made me realize that I had some tiny degree of experience with windows 3.1. It was an old tossed PC that I found on the curb as a kid.
Then I forgot how much I actually did use win95, until I heard the boot sound @ 6:55
Holy crap, did that open some ancient memories.
The Windows 95 in 2020 Movement: "Security By Obscurity."
Dan your the man.. You just took me back to thinking my time being at secondary school omg lol coming to my secondary school all the computers would have be booked hourly slots man they were the days. Life was good back then thank you mate
I'm feeling so nostalgic! I still vividly remember attending the local official Microsoft 95 launch at the Grand Hotel in Calcutta, India. I worked in the IT department of a local company back then and was so excited to get my hands on a copy of Win95. I've still got the launch T-Shirt somewhere!
Windows 95 still looks and feels great in 2020.
Cesare Vesdani windows never looked great, but I get what you mean. ;) it was nice to experience many of the features win95 brought at that time. Today, we like it for its nostalgic feeling.
Faldegast I really appreciate your through and analytical answer. Especially, the fact that you brought up the subject of Linux experience with different DEs or WMs. Yes, I agree with the point that at that time at Microsoft they put effort in R&D to deliver a more scientific implementation of human interactions mechanics (e.g. UI or games like minesweeper, Freecell etc.) even introduce us to the GUI and new ways of interfacing with computers as every day tools (for ex. using the mouse) . But there were many issues too. Ranging from performance issues to how different developers reacted to the new graphical environment. (I know it’s not totally Microsoft ‘s fault but it impacted the overall UX heavily.)
Finally, I’m so happy that you have transitioned to Linux (POSIX) world too. I did the same last year (moved from Mac to Linux) and had a whole year of adventure and discovery. Btw, I really like to move to FreeBSD but it’s not as simple as moving to GNU/Linux world - mainly because if their policies that are in favour of an enterprise-level usage and some limitations on DRM content accessibility. Bests.
True
Would you like something more modern, running on more modern hardware, that recreates that look and feel?
ua-cam.com/video/-lreCRVWJuY/v-deo.html
@ You can get Linux desktops which are similar.
Windows 95 gives me strong nostalgia. Rearranging and organizing the folders in the Start menu, the flying paper animation while moving and copying files, Space Pinball, playing the stock MIDI files (Brandenburg Concerto), the wizards, yellow tooltips, the window style, the sky behind the logo...
Fun fact: Mozilla was and is short for mozaic killer.
oåooåo ipip what’s mozaic?
@@micXmic NCSA Mosaic was one of the first web browsers en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosaic_(web_browser)
secondc0ming wow cool
@@micXmic Mosaic lost out to Netscape, the rival to Internet Explorer in the "two browser" days.
@TheGamerEvan Even Netscape is older than IE. Microsoft was pretty slow to jump onto the WWW train.
This video brought back so many memories of my childhood it wasnt even funny, thank you so much for making a 25yr tribute, it really made me good remembering the good old days. Here's hoping we get another os just as memorable as win 95
Wow! I was a beta tester and scored a front row seat at the launch party with Jay Leno.
The "Weezer fan" at Microsoft was actually Bill Gates himself. I don't remember how I learned that but it was a fun thing to make fun at when I was 16.
I remember having to re-install Windows 95 at least a dozen times.
And windows 10 on every update lol
It was so stable on my Pentium Pro i only had to re-install it every few months....
Welll I have to say Windows ME was even more unstable....thankfully from XP onwards they have been quite more stable :D
@@Balnazzardi Did you actually get windows ME to do anything useful? Amazing.
@@smitajky it came along with the PC our family bought at the time. this was just before Windows XP was released unfortunately, so XP just wasnt available yet. Needless to say we went and bought it later on. I still remember how those ppl we bought XP from tried to convince us that perhaps we should buy brand new PC instead, even when the problem clearly wasnt with our brand new PC, but because ME was so fucking unstable and piss poor operating system.
This was so nostalgic for me! You deserve far more attention for you hard work and excellently produced content. Skillshare is working out. ;)
The little drumsticks hitting a red and white drum -- "waiting" animation -- evidently started in Chicago at least, and lasted a very very ling time afterwards.
Your Windows 95 version is either OSR 2.5 or you installed Internet Explorer 4.0's Shell UI and Active Desktop feature. The huge "My Computer" left pane text was introduced by IE 4 (which OSR 2.5 installs). This wasn't present on Windows 95's original version. (I thought it ruined an otherwise extremely functional shell, even if I was on the team that produced it.)
I thought exactly this. Installing IE4 on Windows 95 transformed it. Active Desktop, and the HTML powered directory view. Loved playing with that
Even if it crashed every 5 minutes or filled up GDI resources. It was quite a neat toy.
yes :) I hated 98 because of that integrated IE in to GUI, but fortunately there is a 98 lite that can remove this crap and use original 95 GUI, but unfortunately many program refuse to work with 95 shell forced to 98 www.litepc.com/98lite.html
Ok, so that explains why it looks so weirdly. Curiously enough - I never saw it like that, maybe because IE4 wasn't really needed given that Internet was very expensive in my area at the time.
And yes! Windows 95 shell was great, and Win 98 (and XP later) destroyed it with this IE-like style of file exploring.
I was disappointed that he didn't go into detail on the specific version he was using.
If he added IE4 (I don't remember if that was included in Plus!) to Win95A, then he really screwed up, it really did some weird things to the OS and I warned people to never install it. Oh, I think IE3 was included in Plus! The original IE was pretty much unusable as a browser.
Or there was Win95B OSR2 - without IE4 or With IE4 (Win95D I think?), but were not retail and could only be purchased installed (OEM) on a new computer (part) or you worked at a computer store. Installing IE4 on that basically just turned it into Win98 with inferior USB support.
Basically, the only version that was ever worth a shit was 95B OSR2 (without IE4) or XP SP1 (or 2, original XP was bundled with the messenger exploit).
Win95A had some serious problem that I don't remember now, something to do with long file name support or something, but forced me to "illegally" install the B version. I never had to use 98 and never had to deal with the IE4 integration. It was right from 95 to XP and then to Win7 and it stops there.
Oh, and I don't remember looking at the "With Internet Explorer" every day on my computer, or the Outlook Express was certainly never there on my desktop. But I think that actually came with Office at some point, so that's probably how it got installed.
Point is, really, if you want to see what Windows 95 can do, you got to go with 95B even if it was never "official" - it was included on new computers for a couple years.
“Cool edit” was and still is one of my favourite audio editing softwares.
Still using Cool Edit Pro 2.1 on my XP box on a regular basis... :)
I was at the Phoenix launch event in 1995 and got a "I was There at the START" sun shade for my car. I used it for over 10 years...
This was finally an operating system that was as useful as my Amiga that I had used for 7 years before that. Microsoft finally caught up...
Fancy seeing you here :-)
"I could change my mind faster than Bill Clinton" lol
@@Aleks-js6ki Awwwww. Does somebody need a bathy bath?
@@codycagle3241 if it's with your mom, ofc
@@Aleks-js6ki I know his mom... You couldn't handle the ride
@@mgaeeeee9150 I don't know, @Aleks might be a perfect fit.
@@Aleks-js6ki damn u r edgy af
Thanks so much for the RetroZilla tip, Dan. As much as I love my Win 95 installation, lack of TLS support has been maddeningly frustrating. You've made my day. Gonna go try it now.
Also, of note. Microsoft removed the Buddy Holly video from subsequent release CDs (OSR 2.x etc). Goodtimes is still there though. Their licensing agreement with Weezer's label must have run out. Sad.
When Windows 95 are more customisable than Windows 10.
Windows 95 allows the use of the parallel port; windows 10 doesn’t. That’s why so many old CNC machines still run on computers with insanely outdated operating systems.
Fuck windows 10 treating us like a noobs.
That's no wonder, 95 is over 9 times 10. Just think about 3.11. You should try Windows 2000, thats's 200 times Windows 10..... Ok, I see myself out.
@@among-us-99999 True, and my company has one real old CNC machine with a Commodore Computer only 1 man can repair, and that is the engineer who build it in 1985. That machine is nearly as old as me and works quite well.
@@among-us-99999 Why doesn't W10 allow use of the parallel port? Is it a driver/compatibility issue? Or something else?
💿 Great video, mate cheers!!! I remember getting 95 as it opened up a whole new world of gaming! I think i clogged my hard drive up in 2 days with all the cover cds from the magazines lol, aaahhh those were the days 💿
Hey Dan, I was still using an A1200 PowerPC right up until 1997/98. I skipped all the fun of Win95 and went straight to Win98 with Unreal 1 and Fallout 1. Miss the old days. Thanks for the awesome video!
I clicked like before watching. Time to watch!
Gear Seekers will you unlike afterwards if it sucks? 😀
@@Peter.Jensen I do that sometimes :-)
Igor Sandu thats fair 👍🏻
Fantastic video, Dan and special memories, so thank you!
I remember my dad and I going into a computer store (in St Albans, Herts UK?) around release time. The shop was packed and the buzz around Windows 95 was incredible. They were demo'ing the programme, it looked impressive so we enquired about it. We owned a 386 (33mhz) PC with 4mb of RAM and were told by the salesman it would struggle to run on our computer!! Top marks for his honesty!
Dan, that ISO for Adobe Premiere 5.1 is for the Macintosh. I'm downloading 4.2 to see if that's Windoze 95 compatible and will update if it is - keep up the good work👍
I was just a kid, but i remember using DOS to run my games. When my dad brought this home, my mind EXPLODED. I had no idea who had to sell there soul to create such a beautiful thing, but i was thankful. Great video. Really took me back.
Those were the days! I remember my computer company that dealt with “legacy” IBM iron mostly. We got a job with installing a PC network on a near by university campus and roping all these discreet IBM clones to an Ethernet topology using NT servers and Windows 95 clients. It was truly a fun gig. I remember my socks getting literally blown off as this campus was part of the internet backbone. My office alone were still on a stupid 96K dial-up.
When I bought 95 it came on 13 floppies and by the time the CD version came out, it had 13 floppies of updates.
25 years later... Regedit still has the exact same icon
Windows versions are like layers, every icon is still in the system files that have not changed, I found the style of 3.1 not just on moricons.dll, but on various libs. Same you can find XP styled icons, mydocs from windows 2000, some hardware drivers and control panels packing win7 /vista icons. and that jdbgmgr.exe bear. always there, for some reason I'm leaving it alone.
@@Diamond_Tiara wow that’s just super cool to know
At 2:22 “full preemptive multitasking” is an incorrect statement. Windows 95 used cooperative multitasking along with all Win9x’s and WinMe, only Windows NT and then Windows 2000 finally merged the win95 desktop with full preemptive multitasking. Thanks for the video!
This video will be incomplete without Weezer Buddy Holly. 40 megabyte video file. Edit : good lad. Try the fish.
That's not so good, Al.... Yep! yep! yep!
Good times bad times give me some of that
40 megabyte video file. Official (claimed) minimum install size of Win95: 50-55 megabytes.
and Edie Brickell Good Times
@@MosoKaiser OS these days. Minimum of 10 gb (if not more).
"Only computer enthusiasts and geeks were interested in operating systems". That never changed, it's still the case today.
Guess I'm a geek
usually that's true, but when you get interrupted by a forced windows update, everyone has an opinion on Windows 10.
I remember having my windows 3.11 computer back in the 90s.
One weekend I was visiting the family property north of Rockhampton. For whatever reason I was poking around in the family car and under the front seat was a sealed boxed copy of Windows 95.
I was instantly excited for my computing future when I found it.
I'm from Mexico City. I also was an amiga user at that moment. A2000 with a GVP 68030 accelerator and hard drive. By Jan '96 I switched to W95. I always wanted a Next machine, because I wanted true UNIX. By 2003 My dream came true, albeit as the newly released OS X 10.2.7 Jaguar. Never looked back.
Personally, I'll always have a soft spot for Windows 3.1 / 3.11.
As a kid playing games on my Aunt's computer in the early 90's, MS-DOS and Windows pre-95 was my window to a whole bunch of fun. Good times!
After booting Windows 95 6:58 is cut, because this Windows isn't Win 95, but Win 98, because Win 95 hasn't shortcuts on taskbar.
There is no C&C: Red Alert shortcut on the desktop!
Red Alert 2 was one of my favourite RTS games.
@@666chapelofblood I can't get w10 to play it
Or no WarCraft II, Duke Nuk'em, Doom, or Quake shortcuts either
I used to watch RA Sneak Peak and game cinematics and it was like watching an HD movie.
Was there for the midnight release party at Incredible Universe (Tandy company) for Windows 95. I was 16 and still remember it.
I remember hearing about Windows Chicago back in the day but I never actually saw it. Highly interesting video!
I remember a billboard near my house in east London that advertised Chicago.
Omfg cool edit 2000. Wow I remember mixing my first mashups with this thing. Nostalgia dump!
If this does not blow up, then I'll be disappointed
This video is awesome !
9:12 damn. you just brought a nostalgia gem back to live. I loved to customize that interface
Still prefer the 3D look of Windows 95 and the versions prior to Windows 8/10. Great video.
honestly i'm glad someone thinks the same
Yeah, the new flat interfaces are sad, I will stick with W7 for a long time.
Distinctly remember the look of prior-7 versions. Windows 7 Aero theme for the best.
I remember getting the 14 or 15 diskettes for installing W95 ... Was facinating ... I still have a closed box with W95 extras
I did not have a CD drive when i first ran windows 95, i installed with 1.44 3.5 floppy drives. was an adventure to say the least. took for ever to install.
Not only that it was huge it was slow as snailS and the wosrt part is if you of the floppy disks fail to broke well tough luck because You will stuck in limbo as results most people created backups to prevent that.
@@RetroGamingWithEdgarRivera We were allowed and encouraged to make back ups in those days. How times have changed.!!!!!
I have a lot of memories of Windows 95. I did phone support for Win9x for a Microsoft outsourcer. Cracks me up that TCP/IP wasn't even installed by default.
• 8:40 - And the MSN CD had a copy of Edie Brickell's "Good Times" music-video, as well as a custom video of a bespoke song for MSN. These music-videos were amazing back then. How quaint it seems now that technology has blasted so far ahead.
• 10:25 - 😂 Bill's face speaks volumes: "Sure… 👀 Maybe I should look more into it if even a talk-show host is talking about it. 🤔"
• 12:05 - Bill's face speaks volumes again: "oh crap, oh crap, oh crap! I can't believe this is really happening! oh crap, oh crap!"
• 18:25 - Now do it with Arachne for DOS…
• 19:19 - I remember sitting on my bed and installing Windows 95 from 153 floppy disks on a 486 with VGA and SB which was a big upgrade from our previous 286 Tandy. Seeing that blue-purple bubble background when it was done was a thrill.
Windows 95 was my first Windows and has a special place in my heart. Sure I had played with Windows 3.11 at friends and of course i had used MS DOS and other early operating systems. But Windows 95 was the first time I was truly fascinated. I only regret not having tried Mac OS earlier. I started late with OSX Lion and used both Windows and Mac in parallel until 2020. With the release of macOS 11 Monterey that also came with new Mac hardware (ARM RISC) and Windows having gone in a direction I did not approve, i switched solely to Mac for good.
XP service pack 2 still puts a smile on my face...nostalgia!!!
I learnt programming for business on Windows 95, MS Access, VB6 etc back in 2000, then programmed for office users from 2000 until 2017. Most of the OS and Office upgrade I was forced to do to only felt like a re-invention of the wheel as far as what was needed for the average business user, and in fact most programs for business were just broken for the sake of upgrades, and provided earnings for people like me to fix them. Sure personal and specialized computing has gone through the roof compared to then, even what my tablet can do is mind blowing, but the bulk of workers who use these OS's are just doing spreadsheets, making Word Documents and Email as before, and the real work of turning System processes into stable business programs is so great that many programs are still ancient and doing just fine.
Ironically it was not too good until WIn98 and it's updates.
Michael Russo Google ironic. That isn’t it.
Anyway it was a huge upgrade from 3.1
Some music producers still do midi sequencing on Windows 95 and older operating systems are also
still used in the art and graphics industry. I still have our first Windows PC in the loft, it was originally
Windows 95 but was upgraded to Windows 98 following on from it crashing.
This is very interesting! I remember having to re-install early '95 quite often, but 95b was very stable. I think VirtualDubMod, video editing software, might still work on '95.
Watch win95 short video yo!: ua-cam.com/video/Hs6JR46mSr0/v-deo.html
when he opened up Cool Edit I got legit nostalgia from my collage days. It was the DAW in one of the prod studios along side SAW pro
Windows 95 also introduced support for Com ports higher than 1 - 4. My job back then was to support some DOS tools that used modems and couldn’t handle Packard Bell modems on Com 5 as the DOS program didn’t recognize it. Please buy an external US Robotics modem and plug in via serial port so you can use Com 3 or 4. Fun times with upset customers.
Back when switching flawlessly between programs was considered revolutionary.
We really have come so far
I want to know something else: how did they do all the transitions and video-in-video effects like in the intro starting at 3:00, decades before Adobe After Effects? Was this done on some proprietary video editing systems??
I remember making HTML backgrounds! Links everywhere.
I can remember being back in Primary school back then and going into secondary... and fondly remember using Windows 95 though they slowly had transitioned to NT and Windows 98... and drawing a lot in Paint at the time... Back then having a home computer was hardly unheard of or only those who had the money to buy one... I remember when we bought our first TIME computer back in 1998 think it cost about £500-£600 at the time.
I’m just realizing Gates sounds like Kermit
Ahh Windows 95. When I was young, my Father owned a Desktop PC with Windows 95. I have fond memories of playing video games on it. Lego games like Lego Island and Lego Rock Raiders, Age of Empires and Age of Empires II, I Spy CD Roms, and Where in the World is Carmen San Diego? I even enjoyed watching my older brother play games on it. It's been years since I have seen Windows 95. Good work!
It was an ok operating system, but not my favorite. But when it crashed; that thing was a real nightmare, and sometimes made me rip my hair or hit my head.
Agreed. It was unpredictable and it really didn't tell you a lot to go by as to what went wrong. For all you know, even running A program could upset it.
I liked 98 better tbh
Windows 2000 resolve all crashes I had with windows 95-98. Way more stable.
The huge factor for us software devs was being able to use 32-bit flat addressing - instead of the segmented memory addressing of Windows 3.x. But it still sat on top of PC bios, MS-DOS, and to some extent, MS-DOS .sys device drivers (Windows also had some of its own device drivers). None of this code was re-entrant. Once an app made a call that went down into those legacy layers, then an exclusive lock barrier would allow only one thread of code to execute - this was for nearly the entire DOS layer because the code was so prone to inter-dependency side effects. So yeah, you could run multiple apps and even write multi-threaded apps, but the execution model was very granular - especially compared to its big brother, Windows NT. But it had a good 5 year ride before big brother became Windows 2000 and started to displace it on end user computers.
Windows 98, 2000 and XP were what I had the most memories with as a kid.
Same man our first home pc had Windows 98se good times.
Man I didn't realize its been 25 years. While 95 was on the first computer I used and also on "my" first computer (First I had in my room for myself) Win 95 is also the same age as I am. As far as Windows and I go there are some similarities in how things have changed. Biggest difference is that today I have mostly abandoned Windows. Obviously I have not abandoned my body, that would be weird.
I remember upgrading from Windows 3.11 to 95. It was the most positive OS upgrade for me, back in the days when a new version of an OS was something to look forward to rather than the dread it tends to bring now.
The first time I saw W95 it totally blew my mind, now W8 and W10 is kind of disappointment. Maybe Windows should die and be replaced with something better.
@@danielgomez7236 In my opinion, 8 is better. No damaging updates and less bloatware. ui is kinda inconsistent for new users. also, no candy crush pre-installed.
@@phage-phroton7690 Sure man, 8 or 8.1 is better than 10 once you have the start menu fixed with some third party app.
@@danielgomez7236 For me, start screen is fine. I was used to it.
U was;t even alive when Windows 95 came out, yet this feels like CRAZY nostalgia 🔥
Windows 9x : 80s 90s fashion graphical user interface. Love it.
I could vaguely remember seeing a version with a fully animated Win95 splash screen when I first saw it in a computer shop shortly after release, with the clouds (choppily) scrolling behind the logo. Did this ever exist? It's not the "Welcome to Windows" video.
MS licensed "Start Me Up" but as a person who had to make it work for others, we often sang the line, "You make a grown man cry!"
Me and my family always had a hard time trying to download and then get on the internet back in the day, in the mid-late 90s. Nowadays, its super quick and simple, and like wherever you go the location is expected to have internet.
I remember I was in middle school in 1995, and we had Apple IIe computers lining the room of my first computer class. We were learning how to type (which I already knew how to do). One day, we had a substitute teacher and she played some promotional material and a demo for Windows 95. It was really the first time I felt wowed by what a computer could do. It was the first time I saw a computer with the ability to have photo-quality pictures, audio that wasn't just chiptunes or really poor samples, and video playing - on a home computer! I heard about the internet a few years later, and then... well, my path was set before me.
And now I have a copy of the Petzold "Programming Windows 95" book on my desk, and I am learning Win32 and Winsock programming for shits and giggles.
Maybe you will be interested in obscure but very nice little programming language - "Pure Basic". www.purebasic.com/
It's not Visual Basic - it produces very small and fast binaries and fun to program with. I played with it for like 10-20 minutes :-)
Supports COM, backward compatible, fits into 4MB, multiple threads, an incredible technical achievement
I never used windows 95 as I didn't have a computer back then but I used windows 98SE. But this video is is nostalgic to me
Windows 95 was my first computer operating and honestly still my favorite to this day.
Launch day, midnight, I remember prank-calling the in-store payphone, at CompUSA (remember them?), & asking for OS/2 Warp. :D
Wicked.
Thank you for the look at the beta and for not repeating the - NEW big disk support - NEW long file name support rot. My first PC was a second hand 486DX4 100 with Win 3.11 and 8 mb. Two-three weeks later I was given the promised W95 disk. It crawled. £40 and an extra 16mb and it flew, wow it was fast. Never had the chance to try the internet till 2002 though so it was also good to see that. I've heard of another browser for you K-melon I'm considering that on an net box with 98se once I pull Win7 from the net.
Thank you for the video but plesse be less stingy with the allocated redourses.
Aging well like wine, like the FRIENDS sitcom
Very well constructed video. Subscribed.
I still have my Amiga 1200. Love the Amiga.
Me too. And an Amiga 600 with furia.
Me too...I still have my Amiga 500, Sega GameGear, Nintendo 64
I've still got.
Atari 2600 boxed with games.
BBC Model B computer with extras.
AtariST with extras.
Comadore Amiga 500
Amiga 1200
Panasonic 3DO
All boxed.
I went over to pc. I still have all cpus, main boards, gfx cards, memory and hard drives from pc's I've built starting at 386sx
Windows 2000 was the game changer for me. After having setup dozens of Windows NT 4.0 systems w drivers and such, Plug and Pray was a blessing to me
I switched from Workbench to win 95 and I remember that was a step backwards in some points
I too migrated from Amiga to Windows 95 (in 1997), my first thoughts were Jesus this is years behind what I've been using.
@@jonvincentmusic Same here. I also switched to win 95 in 1996 and was shocked at some point how backward the operating system and the system was. What was celebrated as new was standard on the Amiga since 500s. I still remember, I knew DOS through computer courses in school and how much DOS was still hidden under Windows 95 was surprising.
I mean I knew this from the Amiga but using it was the exception rather than the rule. I have already forgotten what it was called on the Amiga
😄
@@tweakpc AmigaDOS and you accessed it through the Console window :-)
Like the way windows used \ instead of / for directories. It didnt give floppy disks custom icons on the desktop when inserted either.
@@jonvincentmusic lso I remembered it correctly, but I did not want to cheat and google xD
Cool video, had lot of fun!
0:33 - Why's she putting the CD in upside-down?!
Some CDs dont have a picture at their front so it looks the same back and front
The one thing I loved about operating systems back in the day is when it told you when it’s Daylight Savings time and when it changed the clock ahead, instead of the computers doing it automatically nowadays and confusing me.
Actually, Windows NT was the first Windows with full pre-emptive multitasking.
...and miles ahead of the regular windows versions. Used NT 3.1 up to 4.0 on all my Windows workstations(mostly Alphas and later Xeons) at the time. Somewhat RAM-hungry by comparison, but I never had a single crash or saw a BSOD on those systems. 👍
I actually bought Windows 98SE but ultimately switched to a pirated OEM copy of Windows 2000 pro after finding out that it gave much better performance and built-in features like IIS, NTFS, running on the good 'ol Windows NT kernel. My favorite version of Windows to date
@@fpvm4k3r My all-time favorite version of Windows is Windows 7. However, since it's no longer receiving security patches, I'm sticking with Windows 10.
Nice video, I remember having Windows 95 Demo on Flopy disk, that was amazing, and also Plug and play was a great idea 25 years ago, installing P&P ISA sound card (Sound Blaster clone) was essential for Windows 95
I was always a hardcore WIndows user. Yet, Here I am watching this on a Mac Pro using Firefox.....
Times have changed.
Which Mac Pro?
@@a4e69636b A 1.1 flashed to 2.1 with the 2.1 xeon processors installed. 32gb memory and using sfott to run Mavericks.
@@davidmclachlan4165 I'm on a 3,1 Mac Pro with Mac OS 10.4 and TenFourFox. My machine is a real space heater. It heats my room up. How about yours?
@@a4e69636b Mines not too bad in that regard. It sounds like you're running the powerPC mac. They definitely do generate lots of heat.
@@davidmclachlan4165 Actually duel Xeons.
I forgot about windows 95. I used to custom build machines back in 95-2000. Before I got into video recording and music. Takes me back.