Windows 95 launched exactly 20 years ago today, and though the operating system is long dead many of its ideas still live on. In celebration of 95's 20th birthday, we're revisiting our piece on the evolution of the Windows Start menu. Cut yourself a slice of cake and relive the memories.

One of the first Windows 10 features we learned about was the return of the Start menu, which is sort of funny, since the concept of the Start menu is over two decades old. Microsoft tried to replace it with the Start screen in Windows 8, and you only have to look at the adoption numbers to see how most consumers and businesses felt about it.

The Start menu has changed a lot over the years, but there are a handful of common elements that have made it all the way from Windows 95 to Windows 10. We fired up some virtual machines and traveled back in time to before there was a Start menu to track its evolution from the mid '90s to now.

Chicago

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

What you’re looking at here is build 58s of “Chicago,” one of the earliest extant betas of what would go on to become Windows 95. Things still look awfully Windows 3.1-ish in many parts of this build, but you can see the seeds that would later grow into the familiar Start Menu, Taskbar, and My Computer features, among a few other things.

The most notable thing about this proto-Start menu is that it’s actually three buttons. The Windows logo button handles window and application management, the eyeball-looking menu is an app launcher, and the question mark menu handles Help and file searches. The unified Start menu Microsoft eventually settled on handled all of these things in a much less ambiguous way.

Windows 95

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

This is how most people were introduced to the Start menu, and the button figured prominently in Microsoft’s advertising for the product. Here, let Jennifer Aniston and Matthew Perry tell you about it!

The mid-to-late '90s was when Microsoft really made good on Bill Gates’ “computer on every desk in every home” vision, and Windows 95 played a big part. For many, it served as an introduction to recognizably modern windowed operating systems, and for those people the Start menu was a comfortable anchor. It literally says “start” on it.

This first public version of the Start menu is pretty spare by modern standards: it serves as the OS’ primary app launcher, and it also includes links to recently opened files, system settings, and file searches. Installed apps are all dumped into the “Programs” section, which was made up of branching menus that could branch out pretty much forever. And while you could drag icons and shortcuts to the Start button to “pin” them to the top of the Start menu, the feature is so non-obvious that you could be forgiven for not knowing about it.

Windows 95 went through a bunch of updates between mid-1995 and late 1997, some of which added deceptively large features (between the initial release and the final one, support for AGP graphics cards, the FAT32 filesystem, and USB support were added among many other things). By the final version (“OEM Service Release 2.5”), a Suspend button was added to the top level of the Start menu but it otherwise stayed the same.

Windows NT 4.0

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Windows NT was the more stable, business-oriented version of Windows, and version 4.0 (released in 1996) brought in Windows 95’s user interface along with its other changes. The Windows NT kernel later subsumed the Windows 9x kernel for both consumer and professional versions of Windows, but the lack of features like DirectX and higher system requirements made NT less attractive for consumer PCs.

The Start menu in NT is largely the same as it is in 95, but by default the “Programs” menu is split up into apps installed for all users and apps installed for the current user. Apps can still make this distinction now, but the bifurcated Start menu disappeared in later versions.

Listing image by Andrew Cunningham