WindowBlinds 4.1 Released!

http://www.windowblinds.net
In April of 2003 Stardock released WindowBlinds 4.0. Version 4 was redesigned for Windows XP to make use of Windows XP features. It added smart painting which has allowed WindowBlinds visual styles to perform faster than the included Windows XP visual styles.

It also was able to take advantage of the XP visual style compatibility APIs that have allowed WindowBlinds 4.x to have equal compatibility to what is provided by Microsoft.

In addition, new features such as shellstyle support (task panels), sliders, command prompt skinning, logoff screen support, please wait screen support, control panel background skinning, and mcuh more were added.

The net result is that WindowBlinds 4.x provides a very complete, very fast, and very compatible Windows customization solution.

In addition, WindowBlinds 4.x has these advantages over the bundled Microsoft visual style engine:

1) Uses less memory and resources. Ram usage in GUI skinning is largely due to the actual skin. The overhead from the engine itself is minimal. WindowBlinds visual styles were designed to use less memory. For example, the Luna visual style (Windows XP style) uses 4 megabytes of space on the drive. To put it in perspective, WindowBlinds 4.1 comes with 10 skins and the entire package including installer is about 5 megabytes total. In memory, WindowBlinds skins use caching, shared bitmaps, and video card memory to use significantly less memory than the bundled XP visual style engine.

2) Not only are explorer views skinned by WindowBlinds but it does not require the user to hack the shellstyles.dll. Users who have "customized" their shellstyles have had to actually hack a DLL to do so. WindowBlinds makes the skinning of the explorer views as part of its format ensuring compatibility with different versions of Windows XP (i.e. no need to download a new version of WindowBlinds when a Service Pack comes out).

3) Identical compatibility. Not only does WindowBlinds use the same APIs to detect whether to skin a given program, WindowBlinds can allow users to skin all their programs if they so choose.

4) Works with .suite and .xptheme formats. The standard suite format used by skin authors is the .suite format used by WinStyles that can put together Icons, skins, themes, etc. all together into a single file.

5) Multiple Language Support. WindowBlinds works with all languages Windows supports. WindowBlinds continues to be popular in Japan and other Asian countries where customization has always been quite popular.

6) Fast System hooking. WindowBlinds uses the same system hooks that the Windows XP engine uses (some people have tried to say that Windows XP's visual style engine uses no system hooks but they are mistaken). The advantage though is that the WindowBlinds DLL uses less memory than uxtheme.dll resulting in less overhead.

7) WindowBlinds not only supports multiple font sizes and DPI sizes, skin authors can use their own fonts and sizes within their own skins. WindowBlinds can automatically install an included font onto a system for the user. In addition, users can magnify or reduce the size of the fonts on a per skin basis.

8) Integrated into Themeing APIs. WindowBlinds automatically detects applications that are using the new XP themeing APIs and skins them natively. In addition, WindowBlinds is the basis for DirectSkin, the world's most popular custom skinning API.

9) Massive user control. Users can control the size of the taskbar, change the color of the skin, take advantage of hardware acceleration in their video cards with Hyperpaint, control the gamma correction of their skin, change the skin to be grayscale, set different skins on a per application basis, add additional controls to the title bar, write plugins to control their MP3 player, report weather, and much much more.

10) Ongoing support. WindowBlinds 1.0 was released in 1999. 5 years of development have made Stardock the world's leader in GUI customization. Its engine continues to evolve and add new features based on both user and skin author support. Its skin creation program, SkinStudio, supports many different formats including UIS1, UIS2, USF, and msstyle. WindowBlinds technology has been licensed by Microsoft, nVidia, Nintendo, Bell South, Warner Bros, Touchstone Pictures, Serious Magic, and countless other companies.

WindowBlinds 4.1 is available at http://www.windowblinds.net (www.windowblinds.net).

It's free to try and $19.95 to register on its own. The full version skins additional controls and has additional features, enhanced skin packs and more.

You can also purchase Object Desktop which comes with WindowBlinds, DesktopX, ObjectBar, IconPackager, ControlCenter, ObjectZIP, Keyboard LaunchPad, and much more.
34,675 views 69 replies
Reply #1 Top
If it's released, does that mean it should show up in the component manager? Or are you keeping it hidden for awhile? Or should I download it from the Stardock site? Is this beta, demo, or what?

Reply #2 Top
Download.com was a touch too efficient. I'm getting the enhanced builds up now on CM/SDC and for registered users via https://www.stardock.com/support (enter the email address you ordered under).

Reply #3 Top
. Indeed, normally it takes dl.com 24 to 48 hours to go from submission to release. This time they got it up in about an hour.
Reply #4 Top
Where is it? Doesn't show-up in the Component Manager or Stardock Central. Paying inquirers want to know...!
Reply #5 Top
Seriously, now. Why doesn't it show up in Component Manager? Hmmmm? What's the hold up? Where's the customer service?
Reply #6 Top
If I download from Download.com will it be a seperate program or will it update version 4.0?
Reply #7 Top
Same question as previous one (Oops98672)...
Reply #8 Top
The version from download.com is a shareware version for Windows XP only. It is completely self-contained and will update a 4.0 shareware.

The enhanced version for registered users is available for Windows 2000 and Windows XP. And those will be up in the next hour or so.
Reply #9 Top
I agree with Dr. Frankenstone! > This problem of posting RELEASED updates for public download before being available to Object Desktop users is becoming very annoying. Why am I paying a yearly subscription fee for poor service? If a componant is to be released....it should be available to subscribers 24 to 48 hrs. BEFORE being released to the public.
Reply #11 Top
I'm the only one who packages the updates. Since I don't get "do-overs" on the shareware ones and I can replace the ones for registered users at any time, the shareware builds tend to get built first.

In this case, download.com responded far faster than has previously been the case.
Reply #12 Top
Hey everyone, let's give'm a break here. We've still got tons of advantages over non-subscribers. Like, having all the beta builds with features that they won't see until it is released, sometimes several months before it's released. ALL of the other components that come along with the subscription along with their beta builds, again, with features that won't be available until they are released. Sometimes, no matter how hard you try to make a plan and WANT something to turn out that it just doesn't. Let's give'm a little break here, I for one have all the confidence in world in these guys and think that it's all gonna turn out just fine!
Reply #14 Top
I'm not a subscriber, but If I were: I wouldn't be upset because non-subscribers get a limited, shareware version before the paid-subscribers get the full version, unlimited and not shareware version!


Reply #15 Top
A creepy feeling of beeing left out as a W98 user is present

Has Bill Gates given a cut to WC for XP sales ?

Joke

I have bought a few Stardock products and feel a lil'werid when 4.1 is released b4 a WB4.0 for W98 etc...
Reply #16 Top
I presume the one I downloaded from stardock central which has the date of 16-7-2003 beside it is the new version ?? It still says 4.09

Reply #17 Top
Anything before 4:30 EST off SDC wasn't "it" yet. I'm sorting one issue with defaults on 2000 right now but I think everything's set.
Reply #18 Top
I'm with most of the people here. If you released it. We should be able to see it in Stardock Central or Component Manager. I clicked the "Download Here", and it asked for my e-mail, and sent me all the reg#'s of stuff I have bought, but nothing about how to DL the stuff. Amazing! >
Reply #19 Top
Thanks for the info, and your hard work Nakor!
Reply #20 Top
You download it as an update through Stardock Central, unless you have the standalone registered version.

Once again, things moved more quickly than we budgeted for. All the enhanced 4.1 builds for 2k/xp are now up.
Reply #21 Top
hawkon: WB 4.1 adds support for Windows 2000.

We're having a lot of trouble with Windows 98/ME because of the GDI resource limitation. WindowBlinds 4.x skins a LOOOOTT more controls and each of those controls uses up GDI resources. Thus far, we have not found a way to run WindowBlinds 4.x on Windows 98/ME without it using up a significant percentage of its free GDI resources.
Reply #22 Top
98 & 2K are like the same. What's the difference between them?
Reply #23 Top
I got it from SDC so it's up. A couple of hours didn't kill me. With all the neat stuff through Stardock, a little patience is in order I think.
Reply #24 Top
..and that would require a serious hack of a few resident (and necessary) .dll's to increase the 128k GDI limitation...if it even turned out to be possible to make it go higher.

From my point of view (and I hate to say this, but it's true), I think that you guys have hit a brick wall on the 9x systems, Frog. I'm thinking that perhaps 98/ME systems are simply not capable enough to warrant much more than an update to WB 3.5.
Reply #25 Top
I think it's a joke that people are getting upset over a few hours! How many times does Nakor have to explain that Download.com acted 2 days faster than normal. SOmetimes you just can't win!

BTW, Chickie - 98 and 2k are very different. 98 had no control over transparency whereas 2k did. Things like this are important for WB.