Windows 95 was a GUI based operating system which was released by Microsoft in 1995. It was released as a part of the 9x series of the Windows operating system and was the first operating system that was released as a part of the 9x series of Windows operating systems. Windows 95 was released in both 32 and 16-bit versions and it was based on the Disk Operating System (DOS) which was a Command-Line operating system developed by Microsoft. Windows 95 was released on the 15th of August in the year 1995 and was put on sale worldwide on the 24th of August in the same year.
License / Product Key
Free Trial
Dec 21, 2017 This is a copy of Microsoft's Windows 95 OSR2 edition (OEM Service Release 2). Included in the.ZIP file are two items: the.ISO file itself with Windows 95 inside, and a WINKEY95.TXT file that you MUST read in order for your installation to be successful.
File Size
411MB / 62MB
Language
English
Developer
Microsoft Inc.
Windows 95 was marketed extensively by Microsoft and it brought along loads of features that we still see in Windows operating systems today. Some of these features are the Start button which opens up the start menu as well as the taskbar present in the bottom of the screen. Windows 95 also introduced new ways of navigating the Windows 95 operating system.
The major updates that were seen on Windows 95 when compared to the earlier versions of Windows like Windows 3.1 or earlier are the Graphical User Interface updates as well as the ability to simply plug and play certain devices without going through a long hardware drivers installation process. Some changes were also made on the very core of the Windows 95 operating system. Unlike older versions of Windows, Windows 95 moved from a 16-bit architecture which was cooperatively multitasked to a newer 32-bit architecture which was pre-emptively multitasked. All of these improvements were even further improved by its successor, the Windows 98 operating system which was released in the year 1999. Finally, the support for Windows 95 expired on the 31st of December of the year 2001. By then, Microsoft had released numerous other windows platforms like the Windows 98, Windows ME and the well known Windows XP.
Windows 95 had a completely new design for its shell which was based on the Windows 3.1 desktop. The newer shell was made around the metaphor of the top of a desk where the user works. This was called the desktop. This desktop shell contained files, shortcuts to utilities and other apps as well as folders which can contain files and other folders inside them. The desktop was used in every Windows GUI operating system since then and it is being used today in modern Windows operating systems like Windows 8 and Windows 10.
The difference between the desktop in Windows 3.1 and the Windows 95 desktop is that in Windows 3.1 which was the predecessor of Windows 95, the desktop displayed the icons of the applications that were currently running on the system. Whereas in Windows 95, the taskbar was introduced which contained the icons for currently running applications. This made navigating to other applications easier as users would not have to go through the desktop. Then taskbar also served as a notification panel by displaying notifications in the notification area on the bottom right of the screen.
The taskbar also contained the new Start button and when the start button was clicked, it displayed the start menu which contained the list of installed applications on the Windows 95 operating system. It was provided as a shortcut to open documents and programs both and was an alternative way of opening programs at the time. The start menu succeeded the Program Manager which was the way of opening applications before the start menu was introduced and it inherited the hierarchy of applications as was in the Program manager.
Windows Explorer was introduced as the default method of browsing and opening files in Windows 95. It succeeded the File Manager application which was used in previous versions of Windows to open files and browsing through them.
The UI appeared to be significantly unique from earlier forms of Windows, however. its structure language did not have an uncommon name like Metro or Material Design has in today’s UI. The subproject inside Microsoft to build up the new shell was inside known as “Stimpy”.
In the year 1994, two design heads at Microsoft, Mark Malamud and Erik Gavriluk drew closer Brian Eno to form music for the Windows 95 project. The outcome was the six-second start-up music-sound of Windows 95 and was regarded as the iconic Microsoft Sound.
At the point when Windows 95, as well as the NT 4 frameworks, came out, Internet Explorer 4 accompanied a discretionary Windows Desktop Update, which changed the shell to give new highlights incorporated Internet Explorer, for example, Active Desktop (which permitted Internet substance to be shown on the work area) and extra updates to Windows Explorer such as going to a website by typing its URL into the address bar in Windows Explorer.
Windows 95 was based on a completely redesigned area for working on and being productive as well as for entertainment purposes. It built a lot upon its predecessors like the Windows 3.11 operating system with the new UI elements like the start button as well as the redesigned desktop which served as a digital equivalent of a workplace with its files and folder structure. These are some of the features which were introduced on or improved a lot in Windows 95 and to a level that we are still using these features after over two decades later.
Windows 95 took a major leap forward over Windows 3.1 and started putting demands on system requirements including a 386 or 486 processor and 4 to 8 MB of RAM.
For those who wish to skip this part there are pre-created and pre-formatted virtual hard drives available. Please select either the 1GB, 2GB or 4GB variety.
A boot disk is a recovery method. It also provides basic functionality for setting up hard drives.
The boot disk we will be using for our install is a Windows 98 SE version, it sports DOS 7.
Start DosBox Daum and you will be met with the command prompt. The command we will be using to create the virtual hard drive is called imgmake.
If you type imgmake and hit enter you will be presented with the syntax of the command if you want to understand the proper formatting.
The proper syntax for imgmake is shown. imgmake (name).img -t hd -size (size) -nofs Notice in our example, we are creating a 4 GB hard drive image.
Please notice that you can name the image whatever you would like. You may also vary the size as you wish. Since we are using Windows 98 SE we are free to utilize the maximum size supported by DOSBox currently - 4 GB.
Once the program has finished creating the disk image will be created and located in your DosBox root folder (with the executable) unless otherwise specified.
NOTICE: Please be aware that the cylinder head and sector counts are important. You should make a note of these as you need to know what they are.We will now extract the boot disk you downloaded previously into the same root folder as your DosBox executable and presumably your virtual hard drive.
It should be named WIN98C.img as shown in the screen-shot. You will of course want to have it unzipped into the folder.
It is time to adjust our config file for ease of use. Simply open the dosbox.conf file in a text editor such as notepad to adjust it.
You should add the lines shown to the autoexec section at the bottom of the config file. Be aware that the size and name of your hard drive are important. Particularly the -size parameter. The parameter should be entered as: -size 512,(sectors),(heads),(cylinders)
Once you start DosBox again, you should see the following lines appear.
You should also verify the two images have mounted correctly by seeing that drive 0 was mounted as WIN98C.img (also known as the A: drive) and drive 2 is mounted as your hard drive image (also known as the C: drive).
There is a reason it is called a 'Boot Disk'. Boot into dos using the command indicated, type boot -l a.
It should state that it is booting from drive A into MS-DOS.
Once booted into DOS you should be met with a screen like this. You should also have an A: prompt.
You may use the directory command (simply type dir) to see all the programs located on the boot disk. Alternatively simply type 'fdisk' and hit enter, as shown.
Once fdisk has started, you will be met with this screen. You should see that you have one fixed disk drive which is our virtual disk we created a few steps ago.
The choice we want is choice 1, to create a DOS partition. 1 is the default choice, simply hit enter to move on.
Once fdisk has started, you will be met with this screen. It is asking you to verify that you understand the difference between FAT16 and FAT32, and that you wish you use it.
Saying Yes to this prompt will format the hard drive as FAT32.
Type Y into the prompt and hit enter.
You should be prompted to restart. If the program does not automatically restart, simply exit it and start DosBox again.
Once you have restarted DosBox and booted back into DOS, (by typing boot -l a) you should be ready to format the C: drive.
Simply type 'format c:' into the A: prompt. Agree that you want to proceed and format the drive.
You should see a couple of messages. These will tell you things like the amount of space being formatted.
After it has finished the format, you will be able to name your hard drive whatever you like.
At this point you should have a formatted blank hard drive and a boot disk.
You will then want to move these to the same location as your java executable for the bulk of the installation process.