0:35 Windows 3.0 0:38 Windows MME 1:13 Windows Chicago 2:49 Windows NT Server 4.0 3:02 Windows NT 5.0 (Interim Developer’s Release) 3:21 Windows Memphis 3:56 Windows 98 Beta 2 4:49 Windows 2000 Professional (Beta) 5:43 Windows Powered 7:43 Windows.net Server Family 7:55 Windows Advanced Server 8:19 Windows.net Enterprise Server 9:23 Windows.net Server 2003 9:38 Windows Server 2003 10:02 Windows Storage Server 2003 10:13 Windows XP 64-bit Edition 10:20 Windows FLP 10:41 Windows Blackcomb 11:05 Windows Essential Business Server 2008 11:15 Windows Home Server 11:37 Windows 7 (Beta) 12:56 Windows Server 2012 14:05 Windows 10 (Insider Preview) 14:17 Windows Server Technical Preview 14:23 Windows Server 2016 14:27 Windows 10 Embedded 14:39 Windows 11
It's actually Windows Whistler Professional/Personal (Windows XP Professional/Home Edition) but this was in early 2001 when this Build of Windows XP was manufacturerd also Microsoft didn't have a Name For the This Beta Version of Windows and that's why it's called Windows (2001 or XP)
I remember watching this video back in 2017, and that was before Billy O'Reilly posted videos about the real sounds of some of these Windows versions. A lot of sounds and OSes in this video are fake/incorrect. 0:02 and 0:34 Windows did not have any sounds before 3.1 (or 3.0 with Multimedia Extensions). The 1.0 sound is fake and is a high-pitched slowed-down sound from the first second of the WIndows 95 startup sound. Also, .wav files didn't exist until 1991. 3:01 and 4:30 Windows NT 5.0's shutdown sound is incorrect. That is a startup sound from Windows 2000 beta 3 (builds 1946-1983). Windows NT 5.0's shutdown sound is actually Windows NT 4.0's shutdown sound. 4:21 Windows 99 is fake and Windows 98 Second Edition never used that boot screen. Windows 98 SE used the regular Windows 98 boot screen. 4:55 Microsoft Windows Codename Millennium used Windows 98 sounds, not Windows 2000 beta 3 builds 1983-2000 sounds. 5:33 Neptune was an OS in development that was later on cancelled and never officially released to the public. This version of Neptune is fake because Neptune was intended for home use only. Most homes don't run servers and servers are usually for business use. The only build that ever leaked for Neptune was just called "Neptune". No edition was ever made. 5:42 Windows Powered is not an OS and the boot screen used here is fake. Windows Powered is actually a thing but it is just another name for a modified version of Windows 2000 Advanced Server that was made by Microsoft. There is a Windows Powered .iso that can be found online but that .iso is fake and was not made by Microsoft. It was just a modified version of Windows 2000 made by someone else. 6:10 Odyssey was going to be an OS planned to be released with Neptune (Neptune and Odyssey were cancelled and combined into Windows XP). No builds of Odyssey ever existed due to it never making it off the planning board so this OS is fake. In addition, if it was released, it would use Windows 2000 sounds and not the Windows 2000 beta 3 builds 1983-2000 sounds, which were used only once and never again. 6:30 Windows Alpha Betas is not an official OS from Microsoft. It is a modified version of Windows 2000 created by someone else. You can actually download it and use it but it's unofficial and it was never created by Microsoft. 6:59 The sounds used here are incorrect. Whistler used Windows 2000 sounds until build 2494 (2481 was the first build to include XP sounds but did not use it by default until 2494). These sounds are from Windows 2000 beta 3 builds 1983-2000 and only came from those builds. 7:08 Ditto. 7:17 These boot screens (including the "Advanced Server" boot screens and the Windows XP boot screen without "XP") are real, as they were used in beta builds (builds 2493-3787) of Whistler Server (which is why the fake Whistler sounds were used), which would later become Windows Server 2003. The startup sound is fake and the shutdown sound was taken from BeOS and was never used in these builds. The startup sound is actually Windows 98's logoff sound reversed, level up sound from a Microsoft Entertainment Pack game and Windows 2000 beta 3 builds 1983-2000 startup sound reversed. These builds actually used Windows XP sounds. 8:39 These sounds are actually a slowed-down Windows XP startup sound and a pitched-up Windows XP startup sound. These sounds were not used in these beta builds of Windows XP. They used Windows 2000 sounds. 9:37 This Windows Server 2003 startup sound was never used by the OS. In fact, it was never used in the UK either. It wasn't even made to be a startup sound. This sound actually came from a Microsoft animation and someone claimed this was Server 2003's startup sound which was never true. There was never a special edition made for the UK of this OS and setting the time zone to Europe's won't even play it either so if you install it in a VM, you would never hear it. Think about this too: Do you know how much it costs for Microsoft to produce a sound? A lot! A lot more than you think. Windows Server 2003 isn't even an OS meant for consumers. Why would you need to make a special sound for one country on an OS not used by the general public? It doesn't make any sense. Server 2003 in all countries used XP's startup sound. 10:26 These sounds came from a Samsung theme for Windows XP. Longhorn never used these sounds. Longhorn used Windows XP sounds until later on in the post-reset project. 10:37 This sound is from a Windows Vista speech help video outro. This isn't the Beta 2 startup sound. Post reset Vista switched between Vista's logon sound (yes I mean logon sound, not startup sound) and Windows XP's startup sound until the RTM build. 10:40 This boot screen is fake. Windows Blackcomb, a codename of Windows 7, was never leaked. 11:14 These sounds are incorrect. Windows Home Server used XP sounds, not Vista/7 sounds. 11:36 This boot screen is fake. This was not the bootscreen for Windows 7 during development. It doesn't look professionally made either. 12:21 and 13:11 Ditto. 11:48 Windows Server 7 is fake. The actual name of the OS is Windows Server 2008. 12:51 This startup sound was not used by Windows 8. It exists in the files of the OS but was never used and cannot be enabled without modifying the OS. Windows 8 also did not have a shutdown sound. Windows 8 does have a startup sound though which is disabled by default and can be enabled through the sound settings and it is the Windows 7 startup sound.13:36 Windows 9 is fake and Windows 10 never used that poorly-made startup screen during development. Those sounds are also fake. 13:11 Windows Embedded Standard 8 is fake. That's just the Windows Embedded Standard 7 logo with "8" replacing "7". 13:59 AlphaInsiders is fake. 14:04 This startup sound is fake and actually came from a Windows 10 HoloLens trailer. Windows 10 by default has no startup sound but it can be enabled just like it can be in Windows 8. The startup sound you will hear is Windows Vista/7's startup sound. Like Windows 8, Windows 10 does not have a shutdown sound. 14:26 This version of Windows is fake because Windows Embedded was replaced with Windows IoT in 2015 when Windows 10 was released. 14:38 This video predates Windows 11, which didn't come out until 2021.
6:206:416:59 Windows Whistler used the real sounds in builds 2202-2419 and the Windows 2000 beta 3 sounds in the builds 2428-2469 server builds 2202-2469 and now the server version used the fake sounds in the builds 2493-3505 and the Beta 3 boot is unknown
8:40 the builds with this boot screen used 2000 sounds. The versionless windows with or without the edition and .net server use xp sounds and should hence be after the aforementioned boot screen (in 8:40)
Those boot screens are actually real and come from early builds (specifically builds 2493-3787) of Windows Server 2003, codenamed Whistler Server. Those sounds are incorrect as those builds actually used Windows XP sounds.
@@wariopremium73thisisbobide67 let me rephrase it: Windows whistler server used it after xp got its final boot screen while the former didn't even have a final name. This (the "no-name" boot screen was used when server 2003 was still in beta 2 (2493 to be exact). By the time the OS was in beta 3, it started identifying itself as windows.net server family (or the specific edition) almost everywhere, including the boot screen.
What’s the deal with 9:49 I understand what windows PE is but when I downloaded an xp based windows PE build I see just a normal Windows XP startup screen
OK there are a few mistakes in the video and tips for newbies around the Whistler-Server 2003 era. These are not put in any order. 1. 8:40 - 8:50 didn’t use XP or customized sounds, “version 2002” used 2000 sounds like with Whistler. 2. If 8:40 uses 2000 sounds you may think 7:17 uses them too, right? Well ignore the fact that they are portrayed Whistler sounds, Whistler Beta 3 used XP sounds, hence the boot up screen is an edit from the XP release canidate boot screen. 3. Speaking of, 7:17 IS a Whistler Build, it may have no XP or Whistler logo but Microsoft got lazy editing. I can prove it’s Whistler from the Login screen. 4. Beta 2 didn’t actually introduce the Luna theme, there are a few pictures of build 2415 with the Luna theme. And just so you know, Beta 2 wasn’t until Build 2428. I might edit this comment to add more facts, but only when I feel like it.
"hence the boot up screen is an edit from the XP release candidate boot screen." It was also used for the "Text Mode Setup" portion of the Windows Vista Builds 3663-3718 and 3790-5001 Upgrade Process.
Okay, let me tell this: Windows 1.01 - 3.0 -> No sounds Windows 3.0 Multimedia Extensions 1.0 -> Bells (Startup) & Water (Shutdown) Windows NT 5.0 -> NT 5.0 (Startup) & NT 4.0 (Shutdown) Windows ME Beta 1 -> Windows 98 (Startup & Shutdown) Windows Whistler -> Windows 2000/Me (Startup & Shutdown) (Build 2494 below), Windows XP (Startup & Shutdown) (Build 2494 above) Windows Datacenter Server, .net Server Family, Advanced Server Limited Edition, Advanced Server, .net Enterprise Server, Windows Server 2003 -> Windows XP (Startup & Shutdown)
Windows Longhorn -> Windows XP (Startup & Shutdown) (Build 3683-4093, 3790 (Reset), 5048-5284, 5308-5466, 5472-5477, 5505), Windows XP (Startup) & Windows Vista (Shutdown) (Build 5469, 5491, 5536-5552, 5600, 5712-5840), Windows Vista (Logon & Logoff) (Build 5568), Windows Vista (Startup & Shutdown) (Build 6000) Windows Home Server (based on Windows Server 2003 R2 despite using Windows 2006 logo) -> Windows XP (Startup & Shutdown) Windows 8/8.1/10 -> Windows Vista (startup only)
0:35 Windows 3.0 0:38 Windows MME 1:13 Windows Chicago 2:49 Windows NT Server 4.0 3:02 Windows NT 5.0 (Interim Developer’s Release) 3:21 Windows Memphis 3:56 Windows 98 Beta 2 4:49 Windows 2000 Professional (Beta) 5:43 Windows Powered 7:43 Windows.net Server Family 7:55 Windows Advanced Server 8:19 Windows.net Enterprise Server 9:23 Windows.net Server 2003 9:38 Windows Server 2003 10:02 Windows Storage Server 2003 10:13 Windows XP 64-bit Edition 10:20 Windows FLP 10:41 Windows Blackcomb 11:05 Windows Essential Business Server 2008 11:15 Windows Home Server 11:37 Windows 7 (Beta) 12:56 Windows Server 2012 14:05 Windows 10 (Insider Preview) 14:17 Windows Server Technical Preview 14:23 Windows Server 2016 14:27 Windows 10 Embedded 14:39 Windows 11
0:35 Windows 3.0
0:38 Windows MME
1:13 Windows Chicago
2:49 Windows NT Server 4.0
3:02 Windows NT 5.0 (Interim Developer’s Release)
3:21 Windows Memphis
3:56 Windows 98 Beta 2
4:49 Windows 2000 Professional (Beta)
5:43 Windows Powered
7:43 Windows.net Server Family
7:55 Windows Advanced Server
8:19 Windows.net Enterprise Server
9:23 Windows.net Server 2003
9:38 Windows Server 2003
10:02 Windows Storage Server 2003
10:13 Windows XP 64-bit Edition
10:20 Windows FLP
10:41 Windows Blackcomb
11:05 Windows Essential Business Server 2008
11:15 Windows Home Server
11:37 Windows 7 (Beta)
12:56 Windows Server 2012
14:05 Windows 10 (Insider Preview)
14:17 Windows Server Technical Preview
14:23 Windows Server 2016
14:27 Windows 10 Embedded
14:39 Windows 11
6:41 Primary real 6:59 Secondary real
7:17 JuSt WiNdOwS
It's actually Windows Whistler Professional/Personal (Windows XP Professional/Home Edition) but this was in early 2001 when this Build of Windows XP was manufacturerd also Microsoft didn't have a Name For the This Beta Version of Windows and that's why it's called Windows (2001 or XP)
i thought it was another server 2003 build
Whistler Server(known Windows Server 2003 codenamed Whistler Server)
@@xD-pp5nd it's a server version of Windows XP/Windows Whistler
Now that I think about it, Microsoft should launch a "final system" called "Just Windows" instead of giving updates forever to Windows 10
I remember watching this video back in 2017, and that was before Billy O'Reilly posted videos about the real sounds of some of these Windows versions. A lot of sounds and OSes in this video are fake/incorrect.
0:02 and 0:34 Windows did not have any sounds before 3.1 (or 3.0 with Multimedia Extensions). The 1.0 sound is fake and is a high-pitched slowed-down sound from the first second of the WIndows 95 startup sound. Also, .wav files didn't exist until 1991.
3:01 and 4:30 Windows NT 5.0's shutdown sound is incorrect. That is a startup sound from Windows 2000 beta 3 (builds 1946-1983). Windows NT 5.0's shutdown sound is actually Windows NT 4.0's shutdown sound.
4:21 Windows 99 is fake and Windows 98 Second Edition never used that boot screen. Windows 98 SE used the regular Windows 98 boot screen.
4:55 Microsoft Windows Codename Millennium used Windows 98 sounds, not Windows 2000 beta 3 builds 1983-2000 sounds.
5:33 Neptune was an OS in development that was later on cancelled and never officially released to the public. This version of Neptune is fake because Neptune was intended for home use only. Most homes don't run servers and servers are usually for business use. The only build that ever leaked for Neptune was just called "Neptune". No edition was ever made.
5:42 Windows Powered is not an OS and the boot screen used here is fake. Windows Powered is actually a thing but it is just another name for a modified version of Windows 2000 Advanced Server that was made by Microsoft. There is a Windows Powered .iso that can be found online but that .iso is fake and was not made by Microsoft. It was just a modified version of Windows 2000 made by someone else.
6:10 Odyssey was going to be an OS planned to be released with Neptune (Neptune and Odyssey were cancelled and combined into Windows XP). No builds of Odyssey ever existed due to it never making it off the planning board so this OS is fake. In addition, if it was released, it would use Windows 2000 sounds and not the Windows 2000 beta 3 builds 1983-2000 sounds, which were used only once and never again.
6:30 Windows Alpha Betas is not an official OS from Microsoft. It is a modified version of Windows 2000 created by someone else. You can actually download it and use it but it's unofficial and it was never created by Microsoft.
6:59 The sounds used here are incorrect. Whistler used Windows 2000 sounds until build 2494 (2481 was the first build to include XP sounds but did not use it by default until 2494). These sounds are from Windows 2000 beta 3 builds 1983-2000 and only came from those builds.
7:08 Ditto.
7:17 These boot screens (including the "Advanced Server" boot screens and the Windows XP boot screen without "XP") are real, as they were used in beta builds (builds 2493-3787) of Whistler Server (which is why the fake Whistler sounds were used), which would later become Windows Server 2003. The startup sound is fake and the shutdown sound was taken from BeOS and was never used in these builds. The startup sound is actually Windows 98's logoff sound reversed, level up sound from a Microsoft Entertainment Pack game and Windows 2000 beta 3 builds 1983-2000 startup sound reversed. These builds actually used Windows XP sounds.
8:39 These sounds are actually a slowed-down Windows XP startup sound and a pitched-up Windows XP startup sound. These sounds were not used in these beta builds of Windows XP. They used Windows 2000 sounds.
9:37 This Windows Server 2003 startup sound was never used by the OS. In fact, it was never used in the UK either. It wasn't even made to be a startup sound. This sound actually came from a Microsoft animation and someone claimed this was Server 2003's startup sound which was never true. There was never a special edition made for the UK of this OS and setting the time zone to Europe's won't even play it either so if you install it in a VM, you would never hear it. Think about this too: Do you know how much it costs for Microsoft to produce a sound? A lot! A lot more than you think. Windows Server 2003 isn't even an OS meant for consumers. Why would you need to make a special sound for one country on an OS not used by the general public? It doesn't make any sense. Server 2003 in all countries used XP's startup sound.
10:26 These sounds came from a Samsung theme for Windows XP. Longhorn never used these sounds. Longhorn used Windows XP sounds until later on in the post-reset project.
10:37 This sound is from a Windows Vista speech help video outro. This isn't the Beta 2 startup sound. Post reset Vista switched between Vista's logon sound (yes I mean logon sound, not startup sound) and Windows XP's startup sound until the RTM build.
10:40 This boot screen is fake. Windows Blackcomb, a codename of Windows 7, was never leaked.
11:14 These sounds are incorrect. Windows Home Server used XP sounds, not Vista/7 sounds.
11:36 This boot screen is fake. This was not the bootscreen for Windows 7 during development. It doesn't look professionally made either.
12:21 and 13:11 Ditto.
11:48 Windows Server 7 is fake. The actual name of the OS is Windows Server 2008.
12:51 This startup sound was not used by Windows 8. It exists in the files of the OS but was never used and cannot be enabled without modifying the OS. Windows 8 also did not have a shutdown sound. Windows 8 does have a startup sound though which is disabled by default and can be enabled through the sound settings and it is the Windows 7 startup sound.13:36 Windows 9 is fake and Windows 10 never used that poorly-made startup screen during development. Those sounds are also fake.
13:11 Windows Embedded Standard 8 is fake. That's just the Windows Embedded Standard 7 logo with "8" replacing "7".
13:59 AlphaInsiders is fake.
14:04 This startup sound is fake and actually came from a Windows 10 HoloLens trailer. Windows 10 by default has no startup sound but it can be enabled just like it can be in Windows 8. The startup sound you will hear is Windows Vista/7's startup sound. Like Windows 8, Windows 10 does not have a shutdown sound.
14:26 This version of Windows is fake because Windows Embedded was replaced with Windows IoT in 2015 when Windows 10 was released.
14:38 This video predates Windows 11, which didn't come out until 2021.
7:17=Windows XP Beta3
Well Yes but it's also Windows Whistler Personal aka back in 2002 it was changed to Windows XP Home Edition
I like it how the person who typed this was windows Whistler himself
Windows Server 2003 Beta=Windows XP Beta3
@@WindowsServer-vk8fy I like how the person who typed this was Windows Server 2003 himself
Windows Whistler server build 2493
6:20 6:41 6:59 Windows Whistler used the real sounds in builds 2202-2419 and the Windows 2000 beta 3 sounds in the
builds 2428-2469 server builds 2202-2469 and now the server version used the fake sounds in the builds 2493-3505 and the Beta 3 boot is unknown
Really? How?
8:31 8:32 8:33 8:34 8:35 8:36 8:37 8:38 8:39 8:40 8:41 8:42 8:43 8:44
8:40 the builds with this boot screen used 2000 sounds. The versionless windows with or without the edition and .net server use xp sounds and should hence be after the aforementioned boot screen (in 8:40)
And the build(s) using the boot screen in 8:45 use the regular xp sounds, not these ones.
@@seroujghazarian6343 You're right.
@@seroujghazarian6343 However, the Windows 2000 Sounds are still used by default. This was only in Build 2481.
Windows 10 Andrew black
7:18 Why that uses the fake Windows Whistler sounds?
Those boot screens are actually real and come from early builds (specifically builds 2493-3787) of Windows Server 2003, codenamed Whistler Server. Those sounds are incorrect as those builds actually used Windows XP sounds.
7:17 Windows NOTHING
7:26 Windows XP logo
Windows Beta Source 2001
Windows Whistler Server
7:17 Microsoft Windows (nothing)
It's Windows 2001 Unused Build №2470 (WhistlerBeta3 was Build№2477), No't Just Windows.
@@wariopremium73thisisbobide67 actually it is beta 2
@@seroujghazarian6343
7:00 That XP Beta 2 Bootscreen tho
8:32 That XP Beta 2 Milestone 1 Bootscreen, but colored and 3D Windows flag logo
@@wariopremium73thisisbobide67 let me rephrase it:
Windows whistler server used it after xp got its final boot screen while the former didn't even have a final name. This (the "no-name" boot screen was used when server 2003 was still in beta 2 (2493 to be exact). By the time the OS was in beta 3, it started identifying itself as windows.net server family (or the specific edition) almost everywhere, including the boot screen.
Yes, it’s not even named after anything but in the Login Screen it says Whistler Server.
*boot screen laziness*
What’s the deal with 9:49 I understand what windows PE is but when I downloaded an xp based windows PE build I see just a normal Windows XP startup screen
OK there are a few mistakes in the video and tips for newbies around the Whistler-Server 2003 era. These are not put in any order.
1. 8:40 - 8:50 didn’t use XP or customized sounds, “version 2002” used 2000 sounds like with Whistler.
2. If 8:40 uses 2000 sounds you may think 7:17 uses them too, right? Well ignore the fact that they are portrayed Whistler sounds, Whistler Beta 3 used XP sounds, hence the boot up screen is an edit from the XP release canidate boot screen.
3. Speaking of, 7:17 IS a Whistler Build, it may have no XP or Whistler logo but Microsoft got lazy editing. I can prove it’s Whistler from the Login screen.
4. Beta 2 didn’t actually introduce the Luna theme, there are a few pictures of build 2415 with the Luna theme. And just so you know, Beta 2 wasn’t until Build 2428.
I might edit this comment to add more facts, but only when I feel like it.
Also the startup sounds for Windows Server 2003 and Longhorn are wrong
"hence the boot up screen is an edit from the XP release candidate boot screen."
It was also used for the "Text Mode Setup" portion of the Windows Vista Builds 3663-3718 and 3790-5001 Upgrade Process.
7:17 At the sense of the bootscreen, I think it's for Windows 2001
Windows Whistler
Or in case, Windows Server 2003 Build 2493, the first build of Windows Server 2003 to use Windows XP Sounds.
@@Timothy-San It's funny that they didn't write anything else apart from Windows
7:17 is a Whistler Build, I believe Build 3. Build 3 doesn’t specify on XP since it’s the Whistler Server version, so it’d be a beta of Server 2003.
I'm confused
it could be windows Titan too idk
@@jellydiablo8573 Nope. It's the boot screen of whistler server beta 2 build 2493
@@seroujghazarian6343 is that even a real build of Whistler you can download from winworldpc and and install on a Harddrive for a Pentium 4 PC
@@jellydiablo8573 it is.
8:30 or 8:31 What build is Windows XP?
Build 2472
11:14 has the XP sounds not the Vista/7 sounds!
4:55 - 5:05 has Windows 98 sounds
2000 Viacom International Inc. All rights reserved.
Little Bill is a trademark of Smiley, Inc. Original Little Bill characters ©1997 William H. Cosby, Jr.
Windows whistler beta 3 looks like whistler beta 2 but with colour logo
Windows home server used XP sounds, not Vista, 7 sounds
Can you do reuploads of the youtuber Windows eight he does the same stuff like this but he deleted his account please do that?
3:02 - sounds like a nuclear reactor is about to launch or something
when in Build A Boat For Treasure
Okay, let me tell this:
Windows 1.01 - 3.0 -> No sounds
Windows 3.0 Multimedia Extensions 1.0 -> Bells (Startup) & Water (Shutdown)
Windows NT 5.0 -> NT 5.0 (Startup) & NT 4.0 (Shutdown)
Windows ME Beta 1 -> Windows 98 (Startup & Shutdown)
Windows Whistler -> Windows 2000/Me (Startup & Shutdown) (Build 2494 below), Windows XP (Startup & Shutdown) (Build 2494 above)
Windows Datacenter Server, .net Server Family, Advanced Server Limited Edition, Advanced Server, .net Enterprise Server, Windows Server 2003 -> Windows XP (Startup & Shutdown)
Windows Longhorn -> Windows XP (Startup & Shutdown) (Build 3683-4093, 3790 (Reset), 5048-5284, 5308-5466, 5472-5477, 5505), Windows XP (Startup) & Windows Vista (Shutdown) (Build 5469, 5491, 5536-5552, 5600, 5712-5840), Windows Vista (Logon & Logoff) (Build 5568), Windows Vista (Startup & Shutdown) (Build 6000)
Windows Home Server (based on Windows Server 2003 R2 despite using Windows 2006 logo) -> Windows XP (Startup & Shutdown)
Windows 8/8.1/10 -> Windows Vista (startup only)
Windows Home Server is based on Windows XP.
4:21 99?!?
i'ts a windows fake or windows 98 Second Edition :v
Windows Whistler does not have windows 2000 sounds
In reality, Windows Whistler uses Windows 2000 Sounds until Build 2481, the last build to include them.
0:03 Stop using fake Windows 1.01 sound
8:41 8:42
i cant hear the sounds
Are you deaf?
.
very sad Clark cried she misses her windows XP she's crying a lot on her knees ::::(
My teacher
And with just an underwear
OH WAHAHHAHAT found
Why Windows 16.1
7:18 Microsoft Windows --- ???
Windows Whistler server build 2493
Who else gets an xbox vibe
i watched this before
Microsoft Windows Nothing (7:19)
Windows Whistler Server Beta 3 Build 2493 (2001)
this bootscreen is so blurry
Microsoft windows oh crap
0:35 Windows 3.0
0:38 Windows MME
1:13 Windows Chicago
2:49 Windows NT Server 4.0
3:02 Windows NT 5.0 (Interim Developer’s Release)
3:21 Windows Memphis
3:56 Windows 98 Beta 2
4:49 Windows 2000 Professional (Beta)
5:43 Windows Powered
7:43 Windows.net Server Family
7:55 Windows Advanced Server
8:19 Windows.net Enterprise Server
9:23 Windows.net Server 2003
9:38 Windows Server 2003
10:02 Windows Storage Server 2003
10:13 Windows XP 64-bit Edition
10:20 Windows FLP
10:41 Windows Blackcomb
11:05 Windows Essential Business Server 2008
11:15 Windows Home Server
11:37 Windows 7 (Beta)
12:56 Windows Server 2012
14:05 Windows 10 (Insider Preview)
14:17 Windows Server Technical Preview
14:23 Windows Server 2016
14:27 Windows 10 Embedded
14:39 Windows 11