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Object Desktop (OD; previously the Object Desktop Network or ODNT) is an online software subscription service created by Stardock for OS/2 and relaunched for Windows in 1997. Object Desktop includes most graphical user interface customization and productivity products offered by Stardock, including WindowBlinds , Fences , DesktopX , Tweak7 ...
www.stardock.com /products /ObjectDock ObjectDock is a dock similar to that in the Aqua GUI . It is distributed by Stardock for Windows 7 , Windows 8 , Windows 8.1 , and Windows 10 and comes in Free and Plus versions.
Stardock's Object Desktop is a set of PC desktop enhancement utilities designed to enable users to control the way their operating system looks, feels and functions. Originally developed for OS/2, the company released a version of it for Windows in 1999.
Fences is a utility for Windows that helps to organize icons on the desktop. It is developed by Stardock and distributed as part of their Object Desktop suite. [1] Version 1 was freeware [2] after which it has become a commercial product.
It has been developed by Stardock since 1998, and is the most popular component of their flagship software suite, Object Desktop. It is also available separately, and as an ActiveX/COM component called DirectSkin. Introduced in its sixth version, it supports alpha blending effects similar to the compositing of Windows Vista, but on Windows XP.
DesktopX was released by Alberto Riccio in 1999 as VDE (Verona Desktop Enhancer), and bought in 2000 by Stardock. Mini-applications created with it were called "object packs" but later rebranded as "widgets" to standardize the term. Most users used DesktopX to build alternative desktop environments.
Object Desktop; ObjectDock; S. Stardock Central ... Stardock Central; T. ThinkDesk; Tweak7; W. WinCustomize; WindowBlinds This page was last edited on 3 August 2016 ...
Wardell was a designer of OS customization programs such as WindowBlinds, [11] Fences (software), and Object Desktop. [12] [13] He was a regular on the PowerUser.TV podcast, [14] run by WinCustomize and Neowin, [15] and organized the GUI Olympics (later GUI Championships), a semi-annual skinning competition starting in 2002. [16]