Recommended Posts

This is a shell modification pack that replaces XPish resources with their counterparts from Windows 2000 (with bits taken from Windows ME, screenshots of Whistler betas, and some artistic license tossed in where appropriate). Obviously, the appeal of something like this is somewhat limited, but I expect there's a few people other than me who might want to use the older style, either out of nostalgia, because they find it to be cleaner and more usuable, or simply out of a preference for the pixel-art style. There are a lot of advantages to using the newer operating system, especially after the release of Service Pack 2; if you don't feel the iconset is one of them, now it doesn't have to be a disadvantage :)

I made this pretty much for my own personal use, but I know there's a (very) few others who are interested in it, so I decided to polish it up (ever so slightly - those security shields look pretty awful) a release of it. If you don't like the concept, good for you - but you are irrelevant to any discussion regarding it. If you want something specific de-XPified, or if you find any bugs, tell me about them, and I'll try to get them sorted in the next release.

Download, More Information, and Screenshot: DeviantArt

Edited by vertigosity
Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/365414-shell-patcher-inexperience/
Share on other sites

Download link fixed... my host can't use RAR files. :rolleyes:

um im prejudiging this as a flawed up buggy, messes up ur system release, ill wait and see what ppl think and ill use it

586451652[/snapback]

Why do you say that? It's primitive... but it gets the job done. I just didn't want to put a high version number on it because I don't have every single icon on the system 2kified :ninja:

It installs and works fine on a clean VMWare install, and on my own box. Of course, if it DOES screw up for anybody, I'll be glad to hear it and try and fix it.

Edited by vertigosity
Should it change the whole style too?

586453303[/snapback]

Nope, I only touch the icons, bitmaps, and AVIs. I might throw the rest of the Classicifying stuff in as options in the installer that doesn't exist yet, but they're just a couple of tweaks that are pretty well documented, pretty easy to do, and not always appropriate for everybody.

* Turn off the Welcome screen + Terminal Services

* Disable Themes

* Classic Start Menu and Folder View

* Set Explorer not show icons in groups, use Icon view, enable the status bar, and set that as the default for all folders

* Enable Control Panel in My Computer and hide the documents folders

* Set small toolbars in Explorer/IE

* and if you're a real lunatic, disable the Shell Hardware Detection service.

* and if you're a double nutty lunatic, disable the User Accounts control panel and add an entry that starts Control Userpasswords2

* Slap me with a trout for actually KNOWING all that off the top of my head. :whistle:

works nicely, although would be better if all icons got replaced ;)

586453257[/snapback]

Workin' on it :happy:

Well, I'll give major props if it could truly fool a 2000 user into thinking that an XP box was actually a 2000 box. There are some people whos personality is to get used to a single way of computing and making major changes to that way of working just freaks them out. That has some real potential to encourage more XP upgrades. Or I could just be rambling...

Well, I'll give major props if it could truly fool a 2000 user into thinking that an XP box was actually a 2000 box. There are some people whos personality is to get used to a single way of computing and making major changes to that way of working just freaks them out. That has some real potential to encourage more XP upgrades. Or I could just be rambling...

586456289[/snapback]

Those are exactly the people who aren't going to be installing a user-created shell pack on their systems... and XP upgrades are kinda irrelevant now that Vista is coming out RealSoonNow. I have to give you credit though, for trying to get me to abort work on this, by suggesting that I'm helping sell XP licenses :rofl: Besides, to do that I'd have to strip non-evil functionality from the OS. Ripping out the WiMP, Outlook Express, and MSN stuff is one thing, but removing all the benefits of the newer stuff is kinda pointless ;)

I've got netshell.dll together with some decent hacked together resources, and a 48x48 shortcut icon (how the heck did that not make it into XP itself, anyways?), so if that's stuff anybody wants, it'll be in the next release... I've got it running on my system, and I think it looks disturbingly faithful to 2000. Later tonight when I get home from running errands, I'll grab a copy of the NSIS dev stuff and see if I can't muddle through it.

Edited by vertigosity
  • 2 weeks later...
  • 1 month later...

Right in line with the Halloween season (it's kinda scary, and most of you kids have grown out of it), inXPerience 0.4 shows its ugly face. It's a pretty big update - everything included in the Start Menu on a default XP Pro install that has a direct 2k/ME analogue is skinned, and I took the time to make some original 2k-style resources. Lots of oddball other stuff around the system is now de-XPed as well.

As with last time, the link in the first post (586451638[/snapback]) is still accurate.

  • 1 month later...
  • 1 month later...
  • 3 months later...

Updated April 24th, 2006 with comctl32.dll toolbars and icons for quite literally everything in system32 that doesn't require too much custom icon fabrication.

I needed a break from Tango's overwhelming blueness, and I did this a few days before I seriously started Tangerine/Orangutan, and having gotten that Windows 2000yness out of my system I jumped right into Tangerine, of course.

  • 5 months later...

Updated today (not that many people here care).

Not a single new resource, but it has been updated to use the same XPize-derived patcher code as the October 2006 release of the Super Turbo Tango Patcher (so it now has the ability to keep coherent backups and reload on system updates). I may have inadvertantly fixed any issues with non-English versions of Windows and forgotten to release it, although I'm not sure that wasn't in 0.6 anyways.

  • 1 month later...

*Bump*

Using.. I love this pack and was modding Windows my self to look like 2K before i found this.. I like the old look :-) dunno why..

Was asking several people if they knew anyway to get 2K icons to XP or anyone that did it, but randomly i found your work here 2-3 months after..

Thank u

  • 3 months later...
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Win11Debloat 2026.06.14 by Razvan Serea Win11Debloat is a lightweight, easy to use PowerShell script that allows you to quickly declutter and customize your Windows experience. It can remove pre-installed bloatware apps, disable telemetry, remove intrusive interface elements and much more. The script also includes many features that system administrators and power users will enjoy. Such as a powerful command-line interface, support for Windows Audit mode and the option to make changes to other Windows users. All changes made by Win11Debloat can be easily reversed, and most removed apps can be restored via the Microsoft Store. A full guide on how to undo the changes is available here. Win11Debloat features: Below is an overview of the key features and functionality offered by Win11Debloat. Please refer to the wiki for more information about the default settings preset. Remove a wide variety of preinstalled apps. Click here for more info. Disable telemetry, diagnostic data, activity history, app-launch tracking & targeted ads. Disable tips, tricks, suggestions & ads across Windows. Disable Windows location services & app location access. Disable Find My Device location tracking. Disable 'Windows Spotlight' and tips & tricks on the lock screen. Disable 'Windows Spotlight' desktop background option. Disable ads, suggestions and the MSN news feed in Microsoft Edge. Hide Microsoft 365 ads on the Settings 'Home' page, or hide the 'Home' page entirely. Disable & remove Microsoft Copilot. Disable Windows Recall. Disable Click to Do, AI text & image analysis tool. Prevent AI service (WSAIFabricSvc) from starting automatically. Disable AI Features in Edge. Disable AI Features in Paint. Disable AI Features in Notepad. Disable the Drag Tray for sharing & moving files. Restore the old Windows 10 style context menu. Turn off Enhance Pointer Precision, also known as mouse acceleration. Disable the Sticky Keys keyboard shortcut. Disable Storage Sense automatic disk cleanup. Disable fast start-up to ensure a full shutdown. ...and more. Once you’ve downloaded the Win11Debloat file (Get.ps1), just follow these quick steps: Locate the Get.ps1 script file. Right-click the file and select Run with PowerShell from the context menu. If prompted by User Account Control (UAC), select Yes to grant the script the necessary administrative permissions. Win11Debloat 2026.06.14 changes: This is a minor release that hopefully addresses the false positives in Windows Defender and Bitdefender that prevented users from downloading and/or running Win11Debloat. Refactor Get-RegFileOperations.ps1 to address false positives by @Raphire in #626 Add logging around WinGet app retrieval and increase timeout to 20s by @Raphire Download: Win11Debloat 2026.06.14 | Open Source View: Win11Debloat Home Page | Screenshots 1| 2 Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Still using Microsoft Money 2005 in 2026 here!
    • I have a couple to mention, and they still run great on Windows 11 Adobe Lightroom Version 2 Alcohol 120% CLZ Book, Comic, Game, Movie, & Music Collector (PC - No longer sold / Grandfathered in - now mobile apps/online only) DVDDecrypter ISO Buster Pro version 1.9.1 (Still supports HD-DVD too) Nero Burning Rom 8 (Only the burning software, no backup, media converter, etc)   OpenAL (Runtime) - GuildWars 1 Reforged still uses it for 3d headphone audio PowerDVD 12 Ultra SPTD (SCSI Pass through Direct Driver) UltraISO Windows Media Encoder 9 WinImage You can tell I still sport an optical drive    
    • Linux 7.1 arrives with an NTFS overhaul and major hardware performance boosts by Paul Hill The founder of the Linux kernel has just announced the availability of Linux 7.1. This is a stable version of the kernel that will now be tested by various Linux distributions before it is shipped to users through update managers. Some users, like those on Debian, for example, might not get it for a long time, if at all, while Fedora users can expect it in the near future. With Linux 7.1 out on time, the merge window for Linux 7.2 is now open, giving contributors the opportunity to send in major new features that have been waiting for the last two months. Torvalds warned that he is currently travelling and will be in another timezone, so timing for the merge window may be irregular due to timezone differences and limited internet access. Torvalds said that he has already fetched early pull requests to allow him to do some offline work, but the travel could still cause disruption. Right now, he is not planning to extend the release, but did consider it. He said he might later regret not extending, though. In terms of this last week of development for Linux 7.1, Torvalds said there were no major or alarming changes. This week consisted mostly of smaller driver updates to GPU, networking, and sound, networking fixes, trace tooling fixes, and misc minor fixes. The shortlog this week lists fixes for driver bugs, memory leaks, I/O and USB fixes, networking and RDMA fixes, DRM/graphics fixes, and tooling and verification improvements. Specific fixes include USB series heap-overflow and buffer overflow fixes, and multiple use-after-free, memory-leak, and refcount corrections across subsystems such as i2c, zram, gpio, and net. There are fixes for graphics drivers, including amdgpu, i915, and virtio, as well as hypervisor and virtualization tweaks affecting mshv, vmbus, and hyperv. According to Phoronix, anyone running Linux 7.1 should look out for the new NTFS driver, Intel FRED for improved performance on Panther Lake and future CPUs, faster graphics with Intel Arc Battlemage, and improvements for older AMD Radeon GPUs. If you are running Linux on your computer and everything is fine, then you don’t need to worry about updating to Linux 7.1 as a priority; just wait for it to be pushed to you. If you have tried Linux on hardware but it didn’t work properly, trying again with a distro that uses Linux 7.1 could cause Linux to work on your machine, thanks to the new hardware support.
    • you can also do this with this tool: PowerSettingsExplorer made by mbk1969 at 3dguru forum.. I found it by accident researching on modern standby and annoying quirks of it in 2022
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Jeroen Wilms earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      rolfus earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Leroy Jethro Gibbs earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Conversation Starter
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Month Later
      AndreaB earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      507
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      197
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      139
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      90
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      81
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!