Classic Shell Taskbar Texture

Classic Shell Taskbar Texture 7,5/10 1092 votes
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You can set a desktop background and lock screen background of your choice in Windows 10. Windows 10 offers images via Windows Spotlight for you to use, or you can use an image from your own collection of wallpapers. Windows is far less flexible with the taskbar.

You can only enable or disable accent colors for it, nothing else. That said, outside of the default Windows settings, you can use third-party apps to customize the taskbar.

Classic Shell is a popular app that you can use to add a background image to the taskbar in Windows 10.Classic Shell is a tool known for restoring the Start Menu in Windows 8/8.1, and Windows 10 to the classic Windows 7 version. If you like the default Windows 10 Start Menu, you don’t have to change it. You can keep using it and still add a background image to the taskbar with Classic Shell. Next, go to the Taskbar tab. Select the ‘Taskbar texture’ option, and use the browse button to select the image you intended to use for the taskbar background. Click Ok, and you’re good to go.This is what the taskbar looks like with a properly sized image as the background.If you’re using a minimal wallpaper as your desktop background, a fun background image for the taskbar might make your desktop look better.

This is all aesthetics of course. It’s not going to make anything work better.

Classic Shell Taskbar Texture

In fact, if you have a particularly old system, Classic Shell might slow it down a bit. You will need to set the app to start when you boot your system if you don’t want to start it manually and again, that will delay system start.

Classic Start is a continuation of the; Classic Shell was a popular program for Windows that introduced options to change the Start Menu, Explorer, and other interface elements to classic versions.Update: Classic Start has been renamed to NeoClassic-UI/Menu.A user running Windows 10 could enable the classic Windows 7 Start Menu on the system among other things. Classic Shell rose to popularity and its Start Screen interface which changed how users work with the system significantly.The lead developer of Classic Shell announced in December 2017 that active development has ended and that there anymore; this was a shock to users who relied on the application.Some switched to programs such as or that are still in development, others hoped that another developer would pick up development by forking Classic Shell. Classic StartClassic Start is available as a preview release at the time of writing. The author published the first development release last week and pushed out a fix for Insider Preview versions of Windows 10 this week.Note: Windows Defender may throw a SmartScreen prompt - Windows protected your PC - when you run the program. Classic Start is not a malicious application but it is new and therefore considered suspicious automatically.

Three lesser known antivirus engines flag it as malicious on while all major engines return it as clean.Classic Start is a fork of Classic Shell that is compatible with all recent versions of Windows 10 and previous versions of Windows. Windows users who have worked with Classic Shell before will notice the same set of setup options right away.You can still install the Classic Explorer, Classic Start Menu, Classic IE, and Classic Start Update, components individually.If you install Classic Start Menu, you get the same selection screen that Classic Shell offered that allows you to pick one of three different start menu styles (classic, classic with two columns, Windows 7 style).All options, as far as I can tell, are still available and that should not be a surprise considering that Classic Start is a fork of Classic Shell. In time, although that old laptop may be running fine, it may not be able to run anything of value.I have an old AMD duo core desktop that is running Windows 10. It has 3GB of RAM and 2 80GB drives.

Windows 7 Taskbar Texture

Its days are numbered. It crawls and sometimes even reboots due to the BIOS temp settings.There comes a time when you have to decide if it’s time to drop 10% of what you spent on the current system to buy a new system that’s 10x as powerful.I digress. I have an old 1982 Kaypro (Z80C processor with 64KB RAM and 4x369KB drives). I don’t use it. It’s just a piece of history which still works.

Classic Shell Taskbar Texture 1

When I go (linked by GitHub) to the passionate-coder classic start forum called: Room for classic start dev group to look up or I can (and even hopefully even ferry simply remove this shell (program) and how to I can’t find anything. This because I have to create an account first.So maybe anybody knows over here how to simply if possible or even at all I you can remove this shell after installing it?Will this classic shell be stalled at: C:Program FilesClassic Shell?Does this folder exist, and can you delete its contents? As far as I know, there are no means to a clean uninstall. Hi Martin,I have used Classic Shell for a long time now. Just wanted toinform you that I am running the latest version of Windows 10 Pro 64bit 1803 (17134.137)& the last version of Classic Shell 4.31 still works no problem for me.Thanks for the tip, I have downloaded Classic Start exe & will use it whenmy current Classic Shell 4.31 is no longer compatible.One other thing I would like to point out, you can save your settings in Classic Shell,but I am not sure if you can restore your settings with the new Classic Start,so maybe you could comment on that MartinThank You.C.

I so rarely use a Start Menu that I find replacing what is there an pointless exercise; however, over at BetaNews, where Martin shines in informative splendor with his “Best Windows 10 Apps” he’s at 299 in a series of a series of a series ad infinitum, one of his colleagues points out what he humbly thinks is the best alternative Windows 10 Menu:“Stardock’s Windows 10 Start menu replacement lets you choose between classic or enhanced Start menus. There’s unified search for apps, settings and files, and you can access desktop and modern apps from the menu. There’s also a skinnable Start button. It will set you back $4.99, but there is a 30-day free trial. I’m actually a big fan of this particular Start menu and would definitely recommend you at least consider it.”I agree–I love Stardock’s products. I’ve loved good old Classic Shell ever since Vista went to the dreadful programs list constrained by the tiny box that required much scrolling and clicking. Being able to return to the XP style flyout list with expand on hover was an absolute godsend.The developer invited someone to fork it because he felt that Win 10 is a moving target that he no longer had the time to chase, therefore this is great news for anyone using Win 10 who would one day have found Classic Shell no longer working.Not to be nasty but I’m sure there are reasons for using Win 10 even though I can’t think of any.

(Sorry, sometimes I can’t help myself!). I think the most useful feature of Classic shell is the tweaks for Windows explorer, but I use Win7 and can imagine that Win8/10 users may find other features even more useful. Microsoft totally screwed up the whole file management system in Win7 (and maybe also Vista, which I never used). So with a third party file manager, Classic shell and some registry tweaks it is actually possible to get a tolerable file management system, but never as good as in XP since it is not possible to correct the bugs and mistakes Microsoft made in the open/save dialogs. Classic shell is a lifesaver that will correct many of Microsoft’s stupid bugs and mistakes. I fully understand the developers decisition to stop the development, which is no longer development but an endless work getting it to work with Win10’s rapid changes and many bugs. So if the new developer can keep up, maybe people will continue to use Windows until a real alternative hopefully arrives.