Hello. I am a huge Windows enthusiast since the earliest releases of Windows, and did Classic Shell's testing and usability/UX feedback. Why Classic Shell's development is ending in short is Microsoft has turned hostile towards their own "legacy" customers to grow their business further and that has made developing Win32 apps on it that closely integrate with the OS a nightmare and even using the OS is a nightmare. Windows 10 is an unacceptable monstrosity the way it is currently designed. How dare they design an atrocious OS like this and how dare you use it while neglecting its serious flaws but expecting third parties to fix it for free for you!
Windows 10 has been the biggest disappointment ever because Microsoft has turned a deaf ear towards most of their user base and is completely disrespecting and ignoring what they are asking for. No one ever asked for Windows-as-a-Service delivering constant huge updates that disrupt your carefully tuned set-up.
Classic Shell has been fixing and enhancing Windows since
Nov. 2009 but Microsoft has moved away from Win32 programs and towards UWP. They have also moved away from Windows as a product to a service that is a tremendous bandwidth burden on everyone.
The frequency and size of updates is a joke and a huge disruption to an existing system on which Windows has been installed and carefully fine-tuned. It is pointless to even try to improve an OS when its own developer is making things worse and less customizable and so disruptive as part of their planned obsolescence.
Microsoft is no longer maintaining proper continuity of features in new releases of Windows. They are just arbitrarily adding new features without even considering how bloated and *seriously unproductive* their updates have become.If the nature of Windows changes in the future from a service, back to a product, that doesn't bombard you with tremendously bloated, intrusive, disruptive, rude, worthless updates that leave you with no real control, and if it gives you sufficient freedom to tweak or keep the features
you like,
and if any fork of Classic Shell happens from the code released on SourceForge/GitHub, then I am definitely interested in testing it again. However at the moment, Windows 10 is such a nightmare that it makes no sense to develop a quality app for it. Even if some other developer takes up the Classic Shell project, it just doesn't improve the horrible Windows experience in any way. Out-of-control bloat-filled updates make the OS waste your bandwidth, storage space and time continuously and are an epic pain to deal with. It is highly unlikely that Windows will get any better unless the management changes at Microsoft to focus on the quality of the user experience.
For 10 years since Windows Vista, Microsoft has been unable to develop a decent servicing mechanism for Windows.
![Mr. Green :mrgreen:](images/smilies/icon_mrgreen.gif)
On top of that, the quality of code and features delivered by updates is very poor. And that is just the tip of the ice berg. There are so many problems with Windows 10 under the new management that I can't even begin to list them. But despite horrible flaws, only a small subset of its users seem to care and the rest are accepting anything that Microsoft offers them. It doesn't make any sense to build an
intelligent productivity-focused free app like Classic Shell with so much effort and attention to detail if the majority doesn't care about productivity and if the UX is such a nightmare for us. You can choose to stay with Windows 7 or 8.1 where it should continue to work for years. Right now, Microsoft keep on adding new features but breaking old ones - so they're only going around in circles. When Microsoft brings back Windows to a reasonable level of productivity, usability, and solid, steady improvements (not "improvements" that slap you in the face and abandon all previous innovations) then it might be worthwhile to make something like Classic Shell for it.
Until then, adios.