Challenge/Experiment: Can You Turn off Aero in Windows 8?


Recommended Posts

I recommend making a snapshot of the stable OS before experimenting. If something goes wrong, you can easily get back to the snapshot and a stable OS. This saves you the time to reinstall the entire OS.

vmware workstation FTW!!

So, it seems that if you try to get rid of Aero, you break the entire OS and see nothing but black...hmm. So, does this mean there is absolutely no way to run "Windows Basic" mode on Windows 8? In other words, with Vista and 7, the OS would fall back to the basic mode, but in 8, the OS doesn't have anything to fall back to and just dies.

I said this above: NO. The code for it is literally gone. Impossible to trigger something that's not there anymore.

I recommend making a snapshot of the stable OS before experimenting. If something goes wrong, you can easily get back to the snapshot and a stable OS. This saves you the time to reinstall the entire OS.

Good plan :D Reinstalled 8, can experiment again now

EDIT - Installing vmware tools kills the display again... not sure whats going on this is a clean install

EDIT - Fixed, I had unchecked accelerate 3D Graphics in vmware settings

I have been using High Contrast theme. Not because I am blind but because I find the Aero themes are too bright when using my laptop at night (My screen's brightness is still pretty bright on the lowest setting) and also to save battery power from the display.

It is pretty annoying some of the High Contrast colours are Butt Ugly and even in Aero if I change the border colour to be completely black, the title bar is also black (black on black)

High Contrast is not perfect either with the Run/Save/Cancel popup in IE being white text on light yellow so you can't read it.

From what I can tell from the Registry, everything is locked in the msstyles file and even High Contrast is a variation on this.

I'm telling you guys, you can't. No one is listening though. :argh:

I am listening! You did make valid points. It makes sense that the code itself is removed. However, the Windows Basic theme's code is still somewhat present on Windows 8. In the screenshot below, you can see that the MDI window in visual studio is drawn using Windows Basic theme. So, the code must be there in some form. What do you think?

Windows%208%20Basic%20Window.png

What if you do something that forces Aero off in Windows 7 like run an old Java VM, or share a single application in Lync? If you connect through RDP with composition turned off, what does it do?

I did some more testing and it looks like everything is handled in msstyles, Aero Basic and High Constrast go through AeroLite.msstyle.

Good news is that the colours can be changed in .theme files.

Helpful link: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/bb773190(v=vs.85).aspx

Here is a test file I made to bring Windows Classic colour scheme to Windows 8. You can play with the .theme file to change colours

Just double click the .theme file to install

Some tricks:

Set HighContrast=0 to turn it into an Aero theme to have a Windows Classic coloured Aero theme.

Change Window=255 255 255 to another colour to change the Metro background colour

Change Transparency=0 to turn transparency on or off

Windows Classic for Windows 8.zip

So, Microsoft's claim that Aero has to run on advanced graphics hardware during the vista days was a lie? Sinofsky has disproven Vista dev team.

It's a new system they are using to render graphics.. I believe it's because Windows 8 is now running Hardware Acceleration at Native level. No need for advanced graphic drivers for Animations/Aero etc.

It hates me

I gave up lastnight, all I can think is I need to install 8 when 3D Accelerate is already checked, I`ll have another play around tonight

I'll see if I can get Vmware to make up with you... they don't hate you though but apparently didn't like something..I'll look into it.

I said this above: NO. The code for it is literally gone. Impossible to trigger something that's not there anymore.

The code is still there, if you break the msstyles in a specific way it'll drop back to Classic (Still composited though). I even got it to drop back into Aero Basic. Though only half the windows were in Basic the other were in Aero. I can't explain what happened but it did.

The code is still there, if you break the msstyles in a specific way it'll drop back to Classic (Still composited though). I even got it to drop back into Aero Basic. Though only half the windows were in Basic the other were in Aero. I can't explain what happened but it did.

That code is still there, but if you're talking about the old, gray bars and blue titlebars from Windows 95, those are gone. There's no getting that on Windows 8.

That code is still there, but if you're talking about the old, gray bars and blue titlebars from Windows 95, those are gone. There's no getting that on Windows 8.

I think the point of this is not to get the old classic explorer back, but to disable the fancy transitions and live thumbnails etc that aero creates, disabling aero in 7 results in the old solid explorer that does not fade in and out and no smooth transitions etc, just solid either there or not there windows etc

What if you do something that forces Aero off in Windows 7 like run an old Java VM, or share a single application in Lync? If you connect through RDP with composition turned off, what does it do?

Short answer: It still keeps Aero running on Windows 8.

As I stated on the main thread, in Windows 7, running certain old apps or games forces Aero to be off. However, this is not the case with Windows 8. Aero remains enabled.

Aero is not anything you said it was in your first post. Those are just features, features that by third party have been emulated on older OSs (like XP) thru software rendering which is what Windows 8 problably does with all these feature: Software renders them.

I am listening! You did make valid points. It makes sense that the code itself is removed. However, the Windows Basic theme's code is still somewhat present on Windows 8. In the screenshot below, you can see that the MDI window in visual studio is drawn using Windows Basic theme. So, the code must be there in some form. What do you think?

Windows%208%20Basic%20Window.png

That is a graphical representation, different than the actual program when you comply it and run it.

Would you say that IE is only a e with a yellow line? No. Thats the graphical representation of it in a icon.

I am listening! You did make valid points. It makes sense that the code itself is removed. However, the Windows Basic theme's code is still somewhat present on Windows 8. In the screenshot below, you can see that the MDI window in visual studio is drawn using Windows Basic theme. So, the code must be there in some form. What do you think?

Windows%208%20Basic%20Window.png

That is a graphical representation, different than the actual program when you comply it and run it.

Would you say that IE is only a e with a yellow line? No. Thats the graphical representation of it in a icon.

I think the point of this is not to get the old classic explorer back, but to disable the fancy transitions and live thumbnails etc that aero creates, disabling aero in 7 results in the old solid explorer that does not fade in and out and no smooth transitions etc, just solid either there or not there windows etc

So wouldn't it then be easier to go into the performance options and under visual effects disable animations, transparency, aero peek, fade and slide menus and tooltips, fade out menus, shadows and all that stuff ?

You don't have to disable aero to disable that stuff, you just have to turn the effects off individually in the proper settings dialog. you people really over complicate stuff :)

So wouldn't it then be easier to go into the performance options and under visual effects disable animations, transparency, aero peek, fade and slide menus and tooltips, fade out menus, shadows and all that stuff ?

You don't have to disable aero to disable that stuff, you just have to turn the effects off individually in the proper settings dialog. you people really over complicate stuff :)

haha, totally forgot about those settings, I think its the flaw in the tech heads wiring to look for the most complicated solution first.

A prime example, we have small florescent lamps under the units in the kitchen to light up the benches, one of them wasn't working, so I took out the starter cap and changed it, nothing, swapped the actual tube, still nothing, took the metal chassis apart to see if anything had burned out or come loose, still nothing.

My gf's non-tech brother came over to see her for a while and I was telling him about it the lamp, he walked over to it and said, "Have you changed the fuse in the plug ? "

yea... was the fuse :D

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • Who wants to pay higher prices for the same 6+ year hardware in a new shell? This is hardware where things change fast and improve continuously. They could update w/ quicker/more efficient compute, faster storage, new controllers with new features (not a shell/design update), which are all realistic possibilities. They've done mid-generation console updates, but all we've had for Series X/S are not just different configuration updates (storage / digital versions / console aesthetics). Instead they've prioritized acquisitions, increasing prices, and have lost quite bit of their fan base because of lack of vision.
    • LibreOffice developer takes a dig at Euro-Office in new open letter by Usama Jawad LibreOffice maintainer The Document Foundation (TDF) has often criticized Microsoft for popularizing the OOXML standard for documents instead of the truly open-source OpenDocument Format (ODF). It has also bashed the Redmond tech giant for putting its own commercial interests over everything else. Now, it has switched targets a bit to aim its sights at the Euro-Office suite launching tomorrow. For those unaware, Euro-Office is a direct fork of OnlyOffice. It is being marketed as an open-source "European sovereign alternative" to proprietary services like Microsoft 365 and Google Workspace. It is being developed by a coalition of European companies including Nextcloud, IONOS, and Tuta. However, TDF has disagreed with this marketing classification in an open letter, saying that it is not the first open-source office suite being developed in Europe, as that honor belongs to OpenOffice.org, back in 2001. In a snide remark, it has emphasized that it feels "compelled" to clarify this because open-source initiatives should highlight transparency, not deception. It has stated that OpenOffice.org and LibreOffice are the only two "genuine" office suites with codebases in Europe, indicating that Euro-Office is a freeware clone of Microsoft Office that has rebranded itself to masquerade as a symbol of digital sovereignty. TDF has also remarked on the fact that those that are championing digital sovereignty now were very dismissive of LibreOffice and ODF a couple of decades ago: The LibreOffice has once again called out Microsoft for its "horrible" OOXML standard which locks in customers. Euro-Office also leverages this OOXML format, which effectively makes it an ally of Microsoft, according to LibreOffice. That said, it is unlikely if TDF's strong words will have any impact on the adoption or marketing of Euro-Office.
    • Apple finally brings the slider for Liquid Glass and many other changes by Aditya Tiwari Apple kicked off the official live stream of the WWDC 2026 annual developer event. The company began its latest wave of announcements with changes to the controversial Liquid Glass design language, which debuted last year across Apple's entire software ecosystem. A lot of people didn't like Liquid Glass when it first arrived on iPhone and other devices last year. The devices were plagued with transparency issues and whatnot. While Apple improved things over the year, it has now added a new Liquid Glass slider that lets you switch the transparency from clear to opaque. In other words, you can choose the amount of Liquid Glass you want to see on your iPhone instead of an on/off switch, which would only give you two choices. The sidebars now expand to the edge of the window. When you scroll the UI sideways, the refraction continues beneath the sidebar rather than being cut off at the boundary. Moreover, sidebar icons keep their color. Apple has changed the way Liquid Glass is rendered across the system. There is a separation between different layers, which makes buttons in the toolbar stand out from the background. Apple said it "deeply appreciates" the feedback it received from users and has made adjustments to Liquid Glass. New customizations allow Liquid Glass to improve contrast and enable a more vibrant appearance. The new icons have sharper edges, which addresses an old complaint that iOS 26 icons look blurry at smaller sizes. The upgraded Liquid Glass, Apple said, is building on last year's design upgrades by "integrating additional layers of Liquid Glass directly into the artwork itself." Apple's upgraded design language is available on iOS 27, which is arriving this year with no changes to the list of supported iPhones.
    • FWIW, I've been using Helium on Linux and Windows since the first time it was mentioned here. Actually, maybe a day or 3 before, as I searched for it when I saw it mentioned on the MX Linux forums. Haven't had a single issue on either OS. Not bad for a beta.
    • See up until a few years ago y'all could get away with simply denying your war crimes, pretending it never happened. Unfortunately for you, it's the 2020s and Israel's genocide has been livestreamed in real time. You have to be dumber than a rock to think anyone still believes your propaganda. See the cat is already out of the bag. The world already knows who you are so do yourself a favor and just drop the facade. Bet it gets real tiring keep track of all the lies. Take some inspiration from Israeli ministers who boast on live TV they like massacring civilians. Every zionist accusation is after all a confession.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Very Popular
      Captain_Eric earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • One Month Later
      amusc earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Proficient
      Eric Biran went up a rank
      Proficient
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      509
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      238
    3. 3
      ATLien_0
      80
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      78
    5. 5
      +Edouard
      74
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!