Please watch the updated "All Windows Startup and Shutdown Sounds" video: th-cam.com/video/b8vAAUq5DdA/w-d-xo.html Please read the description before commenting. Changes in this video: Added the shutdown sound used in Windows 3.0 MME. Fixed build range for one of Windows 2000 beta 3's sounds.
@@Sonicrush007 you know about this June 24 there are will be something new Big update generation of windows the next windows 10 will be announce on that day
0:00 - Windows 1.0 development 0:04 - Windows 1.0 0:09 - Windows 2.0 0:13 - Windows 3.x 1:05 - Windows 95 "Chicago" development 2:17 - Windows 95 4:20 - Windows NT 4.0 development 4:47 - Windows NT 4.0 6:59 - Windows 98 "Memphis" development 8:03 - Windows 98 14:41 - Windows 2000 "NT 5.0" development 17:19 - Windows 2000 17:30 - Windows Millennium development 18:37 - Windows Millennium Edition 18:48 - Windows XP "Neptune/Whistler" development 20:44 - Windows XP 22:36 - Windows Vista "Longhorn" development 25:04 - Windows Vista 25:39 - Windows 7 26:03 - Windows 8.x 26:28 - Windows 10
Good list but one problem: Neptune was not associated with Whistler. It was a separate project which was for home use only that was cancelled before Whistler development started. Odyssey was a project also meant to release with Neptune. Odyssey was going to be for business use only but no builds of Odyssey were ever made. After these two projects were cancelled, any work put to them such as programs or other features were brought to Whistler. A message sent to some Microsoft employees in February of 2000 which ended up getting released to the public due to the Comes V. Microsoft case proves that they were taking work from Neptune/Odyssey and bringing them over to Whister. What's intriguing to me is that they were already thinking about Blackcomb which nine years later, became Windows 7. antitrust.slated.org/www.iowaconsumercase.org/011607/6000/PX06720.pdf
You can do it anyway you want. I just prefer to not to go back and forth so the repeated sounds will be over sooner. This is actually how I've personally been doing this for years.
I've been always interested in Windows sounds. However, when I first watched them, people lied about NT 5.0's shutdown, Whistler & Longhorn sounds, some fake Windows, etc. Also, there is this fake Windows called Titan, apart from Cougar or Trident. I'm glad that I found out which are the real sounds, because I was confused.
People often make up things or refuse to believe the truth. I found this out recently but believe it or not, Triton was going to be an actual OS according to documents released during the anti trust lawsuit against Microsoft. This one was the one that best shows what they had planned on page 73: antitrust.slated.org/www.iowaconsumercase.org/011607/7000/PX07297.pdf So at one point, it was on the planning stage but no builds have been leaked so it's very unlikely that it was ever being developed. We will never know whether or not they have ever actually made any builds unless someone is able to leak it. Builds as far back as Windows 98 have been leaked this year so there's always a possibly that it could if it was ever developed.
I would say that in future videos, try and find some higher quality images, some of them are only barely visible due to how bad the images look, and try not to put such a large gap between sounds. Also I didn't know that the late 24xx builds had 2000 and XP sounds, makes me want you to make a video on sounds on those particular builds. Otherwise, this is probably the most accurate video I've seen, even more so than my own video I did back in 2016.
Higher quality images is something I knew I should’ve done a long time ago but I keep forgetting to do it and don’t even realize it until I upload the video. (Uploading is very slow for me because I believe the final video file is 2 GB and my upload speed is 6 mbps, not even a megabyte in a second). I always wanted to fix the large gaps but honestly, it’s kind of a pain moving a ton of files around on my Vegas Pro project save file. I guess that’s something I should try on the next video. Thanks for the suggestions although I was already aware of these issues.
I used to use Windows Live Movie Maker until Microsoft announced that will would end support for it. I think it would be annoying to do it in Live Movie Maker because the timeline for the video is not a straight line but goes in a row of lines which is annoying because I would have to keep scrolling down and struggle to find the part of the video I would need to edit (I keep project files, I don’t edit a rendered video or else there would be quality loss) I don’t recall using Live Movie Maker for any of these Windows sounds videos but I remember using Windows Movie Maker and it didn’t come out well. It wouldn’t let me space out the sounds the right way. I think it was that either the sounds had to be a minimum of three seconds apart or immediately after the previous sound ends so you would hear a three second gap or there is no gap to the audio so you would just hear it like the sounds were rushed to be played.
@JoJoMKWUTeam You currently use the original one? Since you said that you "also" use it, I'm not sure if you read correctly but I don't and haven't for at least 7 years. All of my videos from 2011-mid 2012 were made on Windows Movie Maker, mid 2012-late 2012 Vegas Pro 9 (personal copy that I ended up losing), then 2013-2017 Windows Live Movie Maker, 2017-now Vegas Pro. I remembered when Windows Live Movie Maker just discontinued and I actually kind of freaked out inside a bit because I would have to switch programs and I really liked Vegas Pro but I didn't want to spend any money at all. The other free programs I saw were not any good. So I ended up getting Vegas Pro because nothing else could meet my expectations. You gotta really admit that Windows Live Movie Maker was a really good program just being for free. Honestly, it wasn't a great program if you compared to programs you had to pay for but it did a really good job just being for free.
Indeed. Vegas Pro does have a subscription option for $17.99 a month (Vegas Pro 365) and you also get the same updates as the new full versions yearly but honestly, I think it is a better deal to save up for the full version because within three years, you'll be paying more for Vegas Pro 365 than the full version. The updates might not even make it worth it because many new features that get released in the yearly updates are not anything most people would be using. Just save a certain amount per month and you'll pretty much save in the long run by not buying Vegas Pro 365 and getting a one time payment program.
@JoJoMKWUTeam I'm not selling anything to you. Just wanted to point out there is a way to buy it without it technically being expensive. That's the point I'm trying to make. I'm not telling you to go spend money. They would be terrible. I would never tell someone to spend money on something they don't even need.
@@anthonycassimiro2295 You mean 24:47? Yes. I split the range because no one knows what's in the middle either the builds in the middle never existed or they were never leaked. Some builds have been lost from the Internet and became unknown so that's the reason for the split.
Thank you. Can I ask one? Was Windows NT 5.0's shutdown sound same as 4.0's? I was known that it was same as Windows 2000 (builds 1949-1969) startup sound...
It was always 4.0. Anyone who told you that it was the earlier 2000 builds' startup sound is wrong and never even used NT 5.0 to begin with. As someone who tested almost every single build of every single version of Windows in existence, I can tell you with complete confidence that they're wrong. If you want to know if something is incorrect that you saw in other videos, use this video as a way to tell. I have never seen a video on TH-cam as accurate as mine. I've been doing these videos for seven years, far longer than anyone else. I don't mind questions by the way. Keep asking if you have any.
@@anthonycassimiro2295 Simplified is not better. There's less effort to that. The thing about this video is that no one has worked as hard as me to get everything in one video. Don't say that being longer is bad. Longer is better in this case. This video here is meant to be like a record breaker sort of like 'best and most accurate Windows Startup and Shutdown Sounds video" because no one has ever made such an in depth and accurate video ever. I think that's the thing you are missing about this video.
I had to delete your comment from earlier by the way about your video having the "right" sound for Windows 8. It sounds like you are trying to undermine me. Are you really trying to do that to someone who has been doing these videos for 7 years? Do you think I lie to people? I don't. Windows 8/10 do not have that startup and shutdown sound used. It angers me that people like you assume that I'm wrong without trying anything for yourselves. I see that as an offense to me. *_DON'T DO THAT_*
@@Sonicrush007 I read the description of your video and it says "If I got something wrong, please let me know." Seriously, I'm afraid that what you just said to me was impolite. If you're using Windows 8, 8.1 or 10, you can look for the startup sound on the Media folder on the Windows folder located at the C disk. I did that on my Windows 10 and when I heard it after opening the file, it wasn't the same as Windows Vista/7 at all.
Great video. I think its cool that you take the time to find out what the correct startup/shutdown noises were for all these versions of windows. I made GarageBand remakes of different Windows startup and shutdown noises: th-cam.com/video/ZH25DZcNTlY/w-d-xo.html I put a link to your channel in the description since I used it as a source of information for my video. I hope your okay with that :)
Thank you! I have put a lot of time. I find very cool that people know how reliable my videos are and have been using them as a source of information. That's how I know my videos were very well done. That's pretty cool that you are making GarageBand remakes of Windows sounds. I just saw a few seconds of it but I will be watching the rest.
Well, you know how you added Build 3790 (Reset)? That's what I mean. Why the heck did they reset Build 3790 from Windows Server 2003 and made it a Windows Longhorn build?
@@Thunderbirds404 I went back to my video with the Longhorn sounds. I see what you mean. As to why they reused that build number, I don't know. What I know is that pre reset and post reset Longhorn were actually based on Windows Server 2003 but became more heavily modified as new builds were released.
3790 was compiled just a few hours after the development reset. It's likely it was just a quick proof-of-concept build they whipped up to get a fresh start.
XP was my favorite until people started to obsess over it and continue to use it after the end of support date. I think it’s really dumb due to the lack of software support and security. It just doesn’t make sense to use anymore unless you absolutely need it for programs that don’t work on newer versions of Windows and if it is connected to the Internet for these programs, it should be completely isolated from other computers.
Honestly, it wouldn't make sense. Adding things like sounds that most people don't want wouldn't be worth it. Adding anything unnecessary makes the OS bigger in size, leading to people using more bandwidth just to upgrade to the next build. You can add Windows XP sounds in Windows 10 and bring back the option to have a startup and shutdown sound by installing a modification. Also, Windows 10 is the last version of WIndows. Microsoft has explicitly said that there will not be a Windows 11 and that Windows 10 is the last version. What that means is that Windows 10 is going to be supported forever as long as your hardware is supported (it takes a decade or more for hardware to become too obsolete to run Windows 10 unless you have hardware that was designed to be extremely low power and have a CPU like an Intel Atom. That actually happened with older Intel Atoms). They'll also continue to add more features to Windows 10 forever. They can make Windows 10 like a completely different OS if they wanted to by releasing a new build. You might be wondering that if Microsoft is going to support Windows 10 forever, then how are they going to make money off of it? The answer is that they don't need to make money off of Windows anymore. Microsoft makes most of their money off of their own cloud services. They make so much more money off of cloud services that they don't even need to make much money off Windows anymore.
A common misconception is that build 2481 used the XP sounds by default. That is not true. 2481 used Windows 2000 sounds by default but included the XP sounds. XP sounds were not used by default until build 2494.
@@Sonicrush007 oh I never knew that, thanks for replying P.S. I do plan to write a Microsoft Windows Book called "Microsoft Windows: From 1.0 to 10" it goes through the whole history of Microsoft Windows from the early 1980s to now P.P.S The Book is just for a Windows 7 Dedication because Windows 7 will end support
This video reminds me of good times of fascinating over 90's computer with the commonalities of marketing was set towards the less computer inclined; making the computer more of a family friendly digital household rather than some complicated alien machine. Used to emulate the heck out of windows 98 Plus!, Make my own desktop themes, watch microsoft Sam videos, and even make fake oses on scratch. Good times.
Using Windows 98 Plus! in a VM, using desktop themes and watching Microsoft Sam videos was something I also did when I was younger, obsessively. For me, this was in fifth and sixth grade. I miss those days. I remember enjoying that stuff so much that I stopped doing my homework and well... I learned my lesson from doing that.
I would not get them from Microsoft Sounds Archives off the internet. They may be inaccurate. The best thing to do is get them directly off of an OS like I did. I tested every single OS and almost all builds in this video.
+Luca The Vlogger yeah, someone made a huge pack of OS sounds, it has TONS of windows sounds, even obscure ones www.deviantart.com/windowssenpai/art/The-OS-Sound-Kit-758673981
I thought I had remembered that I saw a video of yours (titled with Windows Startup and Shutdown Sounds) where you mixed up the real and fake sounds which lead to confusion, causing people to believe the fake sounds were real. Maybe I'm remembering incorrectly and it was Windows Expert. Sorry for that. I just have a habit of calling people out when someone in the comments section brings up someone who does fake sounds when replying to them (not saying that you do).
Normally, I don’t go by videos but I have to if I have issues with getting OSes or development builds to work. 95% of the time I can get everything to work on my own but this was a circumstance that I couldn’t. I’ll try again with getting MME 3.0 to work and see what happens.
I used a retail version. The reason why sound may not work is because you’re running it in a VM. Virtual machines use host hardware which may not be compatible with older OSes. If you used PCem, you have to enable Sound Blaster 16 and turn the volume up a lot. My problem with MME is that it wouldn’t let me get to program manager. If I tried to click on anything, it would freeze.
Please watch the updated "All Windows Startup and Shutdown Sounds" video: th-cam.com/video/b8vAAUq5DdA/w-d-xo.html
Please read the description before commenting.
Changes in this video:
Added the shutdown sound used in Windows 3.0 MME.
Fixed build range for one of Windows 2000 beta 3's sounds.
@@Colin-pf1jj It's not. I confirmed that it is real through other sources so I added it.
@@Colin-pf1jj As i know, there is 20+ sounds, and several MIDIs
Noice outtro m8
I have windows in sinthesia my sound is characters
@@Sonicrush007 you know about this June 24 there are will be something new Big update generation of windows the next windows 10 will be announce on that day
This EXACT video inspired me to start getting interested in Windows, and that's why I made this channel. Thank you, Billy! :D
0:00 - Windows 1.0 development
0:04 - Windows 1.0
0:09 - Windows 2.0
0:13 - Windows 3.x
1:05 - Windows 95 "Chicago" development
2:17 - Windows 95
4:20 - Windows NT 4.0 development
4:47 - Windows NT 4.0
6:59 - Windows 98 "Memphis" development
8:03 - Windows 98
14:41 - Windows 2000 "NT 5.0" development
17:19 - Windows 2000
17:30 - Windows Millennium development
18:37 - Windows Millennium Edition
18:48 - Windows XP "Neptune/Whistler" development
20:44 - Windows XP
22:36 - Windows Vista "Longhorn" development
25:04 - Windows Vista
25:39 - Windows 7
26:03 - Windows 8.x
26:28 - Windows 10
Good list but one problem: Neptune was not associated with Whistler. It was a separate project which was for home use only that was cancelled before Whistler development started. Odyssey was a project also meant to release with Neptune. Odyssey was going to be for business use only but no builds of Odyssey were ever made. After these two projects were cancelled, any work put to them such as programs or other features were brought to Whistler.
A message sent to some Microsoft employees in February of 2000 which ended up getting released to the public due to the Comes V. Microsoft case proves that they were taking work from Neptune/Odyssey and bringing them over to Whister. What's intriguing to me is that they were already thinking about Blackcomb which nine years later, became Windows 7. antitrust.slated.org/www.iowaconsumercase.org/011607/6000/PX06720.pdf
@@Sonicrush007 I know, but when people are talking about XP's development, they usually include both Neptune/Odyssey and Whistler in there
You are back! Thank you!
Haha I like how you're doing the OS's in groups! I'm doing them in *order by date of release!* :D
You can do it anyway you want. I just prefer to not to go back and forth so the repeated sounds will be over sooner. This is actually how I've personally been doing this for years.
20:44 The moment you’ve been waiting for
#BringBackWindowsXP
No ive benn waiting for 15:04
bcs windows xp is the worst os ever
20:34 actually
Best channel ever. I love XP but I also love DOS compatibility so I downgraded my Dell Optiplex GX-240 to Windows 98.
I’m glad you enjoy the videos!
I've been always interested in Windows sounds. However, when I first watched them, people lied about NT 5.0's shutdown, Whistler & Longhorn sounds, some fake Windows, etc.
Also, there is this fake Windows called Titan, apart from Cougar or Trident.
I'm glad that I found out which are the real sounds, because I was confused.
People often make up things or refuse to believe the truth.
I found this out recently but believe it or not, Triton was going to be an actual OS according to documents released during the anti trust lawsuit against Microsoft. This one was the one that best shows what they had planned on page 73: antitrust.slated.org/www.iowaconsumercase.org/011607/7000/PX07297.pdf
So at one point, it was on the planning stage but no builds have been leaked so it's very unlikely that it was ever being developed. We will never know whether or not they have ever actually made any builds unless someone is able to leak it. Builds as far back as Windows 98 have been leaked this year so there's always a possibly that it could if it was ever developed.
I would say that in future videos, try and find some higher quality images, some of them are only barely visible due to how bad the images look, and try not to put such a large gap between sounds.
Also I didn't know that the late 24xx builds had 2000 and XP sounds, makes me want you to make a video on sounds on those particular builds.
Otherwise, this is probably the most accurate video I've seen, even more so than my own video I did back in 2016.
Higher quality images is something I knew I should’ve done a long time ago but I keep forgetting to do it and don’t even realize it until I upload the video. (Uploading is very slow for me because I believe the final video file is 2 GB and my upload speed is 6 mbps, not even a megabyte in a second).
I always wanted to fix the large gaps but honestly, it’s kind of a pain moving a ton of files around on my Vegas Pro project save file. I guess that’s something I should try on the next video.
Thanks for the suggestions although I was already aware of these issues.
I used to use Windows Live Movie Maker until Microsoft announced that will would end support for it. I think it would be annoying to do it in Live Movie Maker because the timeline for the video is not a straight line but goes in a row of lines which is annoying because I would have to keep scrolling down and struggle to find the part of the video I would need to edit (I keep project files, I don’t edit a rendered video or else there would be quality loss)
I don’t recall using Live Movie Maker for any of these Windows sounds videos but I remember using Windows Movie Maker and it didn’t come out well. It wouldn’t let me space out the sounds the right way. I think it was that either the sounds had to be a minimum of three seconds apart or immediately after the previous sound ends so you would hear a three second gap or there is no gap to the audio so you would just hear it like the sounds were rushed to be played.
@JoJoMKWUTeam You currently use the original one? Since you said that you "also" use it, I'm not sure if you read correctly but I don't and haven't for at least 7 years. All of my videos from 2011-mid 2012 were made on Windows Movie Maker, mid 2012-late 2012 Vegas Pro 9 (personal copy that I ended up losing), then 2013-2017 Windows Live Movie Maker, 2017-now Vegas Pro.
I remembered when Windows Live Movie Maker just discontinued and I actually kind of freaked out inside a bit because I would have to switch programs and I really liked Vegas Pro but I didn't want to spend any money at all. The other free programs I saw were not any good. So I ended up getting Vegas Pro because nothing else could meet my expectations.
You gotta really admit that Windows Live Movie Maker was a really good program just being for free. Honestly, it wasn't a great program if you compared to programs you had to pay for but it did a really good job just being for free.
Indeed. Vegas Pro does have a subscription option for $17.99 a month (Vegas Pro 365) and you also get the same updates as the new full versions yearly but honestly, I think it is a better deal to save up for the full version because within three years, you'll be paying more for Vegas Pro 365 than the full version. The updates might not even make it worth it because many new features that get released in the yearly updates are not anything most people would be using. Just save a certain amount per month and you'll pretty much save in the long run by not buying Vegas Pro 365 and getting a one time payment program.
@JoJoMKWUTeam I'm not selling anything to you. Just wanted to point out there is a way to buy it without it technically being expensive. That's the point I'm trying to make. I'm not telling you to go spend money. They would be terrible. I would never tell someone to spend money on something they don't even need.
Windows 95 has the most beautiful startup to be honest
I never knew Windows MME was the first one to have a shutdown sound.
Didn’t expect water as a startup or shutdown sound for Windows 3.0.
That’s Windows MME. Not 3.0 itself
I like looking at fake and real OSes, they interest me a lot.
I swear if I hear one more TA-DA...
th-cam.com/video/wO9q4H49cGA/w-d-xo.html
@@Sonicrush007 tada
Is that sound at 24:38 actually used in the startup of the build 5568 of Windows Vista? I often heard it as a logon sound on Windows 7.
Yes. Sounds change a lot in the Longhorn development which is why the Longhorn section of the video is so long.
@@Sonicrush007 And that sound at 24:27 is for the shutdown of builds 5469 through 5491 and 5536 through 5840?
@@anthonycassimiro2295 You mean 24:47? Yes. I split the range because no one knows what's in the middle either the builds in the middle never existed or they were never leaked. Some builds have been lost from the Internet and became unknown so that's the reason for the split.
@@Sonicrush007 Also, but the first time it plays is at 24:27.
@@anthonycassimiro2295 That's because there is a boot screen change for the second part. Every detail is added.
20:34 XP forever
Active a certain nostalgia switch AKA 20:34 to 25:40
20:44 It's a me
You're in this video duuude how cool isn't that.
Dont know that 8 up until 10 used vista/7 sounds, never have windows 8 or 10 before as im just using xp and 7 now
skip to 1:58 if you don't want to hear too many tadas as the startup.
Thank you. Can I ask one? Was Windows NT 5.0's shutdown sound same as 4.0's? I was known that it was same as Windows 2000 (builds 1949-1969) startup sound...
It was always 4.0. Anyone who told you that it was the earlier 2000 builds' startup sound is wrong and never even used NT 5.0 to begin with. As someone who tested almost every single build of every single version of Windows in existence, I can tell you with complete confidence that they're wrong. If you want to know if something is incorrect that you saw in other videos, use this video as a way to tell. I have never seen a video on TH-cam as accurate as mine. I've been doing these videos for seven years, far longer than anyone else.
I don't mind questions by the way. Keep asking if you have any.
@@Sonicrush007 7 years... I respect who collect and show me lots of computer graphics and sounds like you. Thank you so much.
all start up sounds... maybe also all sounds too? like asterisk, logon, logoff, etc?
18:25/18:32 and 18:37/18:44 are the same.
Sounds being the same doesn't matter. All that matters is that all builds get counted in each build and changes such as boot screens get in the video.
@@Sonicrush007 My video has a more simplified content.
@@anthonycassimiro2295 Simplified is not better. There's less effort to that. The thing about this video is that no one has worked as hard as me to get everything in one video. Don't say that being longer is bad. Longer is better in this case. This video here is meant to be like a record breaker sort of like 'best and most accurate Windows Startup and Shutdown Sounds video" because no one has ever made such an in depth and accurate video ever. I think that's the thing you are missing about this video.
I had to delete your comment from earlier by the way about your video having the "right" sound for Windows 8. It sounds like you are trying to undermine me. Are you really trying to do that to someone who has been doing these videos for 7 years? Do you think I lie to people? I don't. Windows 8/10 do not have that startup and shutdown sound used. It angers me that people like you assume that I'm wrong without trying anything for yourselves. I see that as an offense to me. *_DON'T DO THAT_*
@@Sonicrush007 I read the description of your video and it says "If I got something wrong, please let me know." Seriously, I'm afraid that what you just said to me was impolite. If you're using Windows 8, 8.1 or 10, you can look for the startup sound on the Media folder on the Windows folder located at the C disk. I did that on my Windows 10 and when I heard it after opening the file, it wasn't the same as Windows Vista/7 at all.
Great video. I think its cool that you take the time to find out what the correct startup/shutdown noises were for all these versions of windows.
I made GarageBand remakes of different Windows startup and shutdown noises: th-cam.com/video/ZH25DZcNTlY/w-d-xo.html
I put a link to your channel in the description since I used it as a source of information for my video. I hope your okay with that :)
Thank you! I have put a lot of time. I find very cool that people know how reliable my videos are and have been using them as a source of information. That's how I know my videos were very well done.
That's pretty cool that you are making GarageBand remakes of Windows sounds. I just saw a few seconds of it but I will be watching the rest.
Why did they reset build 3970 of Windows server 2003?
Not sure what you mean. According to betawiki.net, that's the RTM build.
Well, you know how you added Build 3790 (Reset)? That's what I mean. Why the heck did they reset Build 3790 from Windows Server 2003 and made it a Windows Longhorn build?
@@Thunderbirds404 I went back to my video with the Longhorn sounds. I see what you mean. As to why they reused that build number, I don't know. What I know is that pre reset and post reset Longhorn were actually based on Windows Server 2003 but became more heavily modified as new builds were released.
3790 was compiled just a few hours after the development reset. It's likely it was just a quick proof-of-concept build they whipped up to get a fresh start.
Just curious, do you know if Microsoft partnered with the company who manage peanuts (i dont know who they are) to make some type of app or software?
Either they partnered with them or they got permission to do it. If they didn't do one of those two, they probably would've been sued.
Just curious, what is your favorite Windows OS?
Windows 10 because it is the newest and most secure Windows OS.
Windows 10 FTW? What about Windows XP FTW?
XP was my favorite until people started to obsess over it and continue to use it after the end of support date. I think it’s really dumb due to the lack of software support and security. It just doesn’t make sense to use anymore unless you absolutely need it for programs that don’t work on newer versions of Windows and if it is connected to the Internet for these programs, it should be completely isolated from other computers.
I see why people like Windows 10. In fact I use it. My favorite is XP because of how long I've used the system. It was my childhood.
My top 3
1. Windows 7
2. Windows XP
3. Windows 10
Is this a redone version?
No. I did not redo the whole video. I have a project file from Vegas Pro so I can edit in the middle of the project.
Microsoft needs to bring back the windows xp startup and shutdown sound in future os! Miss that sound so much.
Honestly, it wouldn't make sense. Adding things like sounds that most people don't want wouldn't be worth it. Adding anything unnecessary makes the OS bigger in size, leading to people using more bandwidth just to upgrade to the next build. You can add Windows XP sounds in Windows 10 and bring back the option to have a startup and shutdown sound by installing a modification.
Also, Windows 10 is the last version of WIndows. Microsoft has explicitly said that there will not be a Windows 11 and that Windows 10 is the last version. What that means is that Windows 10 is going to be supported forever as long as your hardware is supported (it takes a decade or more for hardware to become too obsolete to run Windows 10 unless you have hardware that was designed to be extremely low power and have a CPU like an Intel Atom. That actually happened with older Intel Atoms). They'll also continue to add more features to Windows 10 forever. They can make Windows 10 like a completely different OS if they wanted to by releasing a new build.
You might be wondering that if Microsoft is going to support Windows 10 forever, then how are they going to make money off of it? The answer is that they don't need to make money off of Windows anymore. Microsoft makes most of their money off of their own cloud services. They make so much more money off of cloud services that they don't even need to make much money off Windows anymore.
i also love it, but it just sound outdated
@@이리야 in 2021, they created Windows 11
I am not use to the Windows 2000/ME startup and shutdown sound on Windows XP development until Build 2494
A common misconception is that build 2481 used the XP sounds by default. That is not true. 2481 used Windows 2000 sounds by default but included the XP sounds. XP sounds were not used by default until build 2494.
@@Sonicrush007 oh I never knew that, thanks for replying
P.S. I do plan to write a Microsoft Windows Book called "Microsoft Windows: From 1.0 to 10" it goes through the whole history of Microsoft Windows from the early 1980s to now
P.P.S The Book is just for a Windows 7 Dedication because Windows 7 will end support
windows 95 betas be like:
TADA
TADA
TADA
TADA
TADA
TADA
TADA
TADA
TADA
TADA
TADA
TADA
TADA
TADA
TADA
TADA
TADA
Also the windows Chicago builds
Chicago is the Windows 95 beta
Fact to everyone: ME was the last Windows OS to use Windows 9x and MS-DOS since it was support to be the final improvement to Windows 98
Me was indeed based on MS-DOS like the previous 9x OSes but DOS was not accessible so boot times could be increased.
Also, Windows Me wasn't exactly meant to be an improvement. It was more designed to be home user oriented.
Too many TaDa’s. That’s all I’ve gotta say.
Also, didn’t all of the Windows Longhorn/Vista Beta builds just use the XP sounds?
Not all. All of the pre reset builds used XP sounds. The post reset builds used both XP and Vista RTM sounds and switched back and forth with them.
Billy O'Reilly, now I understand.
Thanks for telling me.
This video reminds me of good times of fascinating over 90's computer with the commonalities of marketing was set towards the less computer inclined; making the computer more of a family friendly digital household rather than some complicated alien machine. Used to emulate the heck out of windows 98 Plus!, Make my own desktop themes, watch microsoft Sam videos, and even make fake oses on scratch. Good times.
Using Windows 98 Plus! in a VM, using desktop themes and watching Microsoft Sam videos was something I also did when I was younger, obsessively. For me, this was in fifth and sixth grade. I miss those days. I remember enjoying that stuff so much that I stopped doing my homework and well... I learned my lesson from doing that.
16:47 me likee
Did you know Windows Vista build 5920?
Also build 5840.16389?
Where did you get these sounds from tho? Is there any Microsoft Sounds Archive?
I would not get them from Microsoft Sounds Archives off the internet. They may be inaccurate. The best thing to do is get them directly off of an OS like I did. I tested every single OS and almost all builds in this video.
+Luca The Vlogger yeah, someone made a huge pack of OS sounds, it has TONS of windows sounds, even obscure ones www.deviantart.com/windowssenpai/art/The-OS-Sound-Kit-758673981
+U I would be very careful with that user "Windows Senpai". He had a well known TH-cam channel where he spread false sounds on his videos.
@@Sonicrush007 uhh what this guy actually does his research
I thought I had remembered that I saw a video of yours (titled with Windows Startup and Shutdown Sounds) where you mixed up the real and fake sounds which lead to confusion, causing people to believe the fake sounds were real. Maybe I'm remembering incorrectly and it was Windows Expert. Sorry for that. I just have a habit of calling people out when someone in the comments section brings up someone who does fake sounds when replying to them (not saying that you do).
Ron Zanhg are you sirius
0:19 what???
Weird, isn't it? Seriously, I doubted that sound being real myself. Believe it or not, that was the actual sound used for the shutdown sound.
0:20 dafuq
11:10 WHAT THE F**K IS WRONG WITH YOU MICROSOFT
19:50 really starting to look like xp
You forgot the startup sound of Windows MME 3.0: th-cam.com/video/16cUyFXWgQs/w-d-xo.html
I didn’t add a startup sound since out of 10 videos I watched of people installing it, I never heard a startup being played but a shutdown was.
Normally, I don’t go by videos but I have to if I have issues with getting OSes or development builds to work. 95% of the time I can get everything to work on my own but this was a circumstance that I couldn’t. I’ll try again with getting MME 3.0 to work and see what happens.
Billy O'Reilly Did you use the Tandy version or the non-Tandy version? If you didn’t hear the sound on one of them, try the other option.
I used a retail version. The reason why sound may not work is because you’re running it in a VM. Virtual machines use host hardware which may not be compatible with older OSes. If you used PCem, you have to enable Sound Blaster 16 and turn the volume up a lot. My problem with MME is that it wouldn’t let me get to program manager. If I tried to click on anything, it would freeze.
Billy O'Reilly It would freeze on mine, too 😞
TADAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA