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Microsoft codenames are given by Microsoft to products it has in development before these products are given the names by which they appear on store shelves. Many of these products (new versions of Windows in particular) are of major significance to the IT community, and so the terms are often widely used in discussions before the official release.
Rainmeter is a free and open-source desktop customization utility for Windows released under the GNU GPL v2 license. It allows users to create and display user-generated customizable desktop widgets or applets called "skins" that display information. [3] [4] Ready to use collections of skins can be downloaded and installed in packages known as ...
Grover — Sun Next generation Darwin 10; Gryphon — Microsoft Windows CE 2.01, Palm PC 1.0; Guava — Sun PGX64; Guinness — Apple Macintosh Portable; Guinness — Red Hat Linux 7.0 (reference to Alec Guinness) Guinness — Silicon Graphics Indy Workstation; Gumbi — Sun QuadFastEthernet PCI; Gumby — Apple IIGS; Gutsy Gibbon — Ubuntu 7.10
Windows 10 Version 1703 Photos: Simple image viewer Windows 8: Steps Recorder (called Problem Steps Recorder in Windows 7) Utility that allows the user to capture steps they took to reproduce a problem Windows 7: Windows To Go: Utility to create bootable versions of Windows 8 and above Windows 8: Notepad: Simple text editor: Windows 1.0: Narrator
This is a list of software palettes used by computers. Systems that use a 4-bit or 8-bit pixel depth can display up to 16 or 256 colors simultaneously. Many personal computers in the early 1990s displayed at most 256 different colors, freely selected by software (either by the user or by a program) from their wider hardware's RGB color palette.
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WindowBlinds 10, released in March 2016, added native support for Windows 10 and some minor new features. Windowblinds 11, released in November 2022, updated the UI to fit the design language of Windows 11, added a Windows 9x styled theme to the collection of default themes and improved support for dark mode and HDR.