Wally Actuellement banni Protoxyde d’azote

Age: 31 Inscrit le: 17 Mar 2004 Messages: 4019 Réalisations: 9
Localisation: Marseille
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« On Windows 98, ME, NT, and 2000, the OS wasn't natively skinnable. It wasn't designed to have its user interface altered by anyone. This is particularly true of Windows 98 and ME which are not well suited for customization because of their GDI limit (Windows 98 and Windows ME only support having 128K --Kilobytes-- of memory used for GUI related graphics, if this memory is used up, the system can become unstable). Windows NT and 2000 are much better suited towards it.
The most popular way to skin the Windows GUI is using the program WindowBlinds. It runs on Windows XP, 2000, ME, and 98. It applies what are called "visual styles". A visual style being a skin designed specifically to change the actual OS user interface. WindowBlinds has been around a long time and earlier versions of it were mostly used on Windows 98/ME and suffered from performance and stability issues. But as Windows 2000 and later Windows XP became dominant, WindowBlinds has evolved into being a very fast, reliabile and resource light program for changing the GUI. » |