![]() It licensed The Rolling Stones’ hit single Start Me Up for a staggering $10m (give or take) and the song accompanied countless promotions in the lead-up to the big day. In a moment of marketing clarity, Microsoft went all-in on the Start button. ![]() There were a range of other Windows 95 features that were eventually added, most of which carry through to today – and were not all exclusive to Windows: right-clicked context menus the desktop as a folder and the My Computer icon shortcuts the recycle bin a better way to get at files and settings through Windows Explorer and Device Manager and the much-touted Plug and Play which tried to automate the process of installing drivers and getting things like printers working without much fuss. (And yeah, we know RISC OS, at least, had an icon bar before Windows 95 got its task bar it didn't quite have a Start button, though, unless you installed one of many third-party apps.) The Start button has informed pretty much everyone’s understanding of how to interact with a Microsoft OS and Redmond, to its credit, knew it had something good on its hands. ![]() ![]() And the biggest was the Start button which, even a quarter of a century later still exists albeit after various redesigns and rethinks. In a move that cemented its place in computing history and made Bill Gates the richest man on Earth, Microsoft stopped stealing its ideas from the likes of Xerox PARC and Apple – and came up with a few of its own, forming Windows 95. ![]()
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