Windows 3.1 tiled background .bmp archive (github.com)

by justsomehnguy 75 comments 275 points
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75 comments

[−] LetsGetTechnicl 53d ago
Here's someone's personal archive of weird miscellanea, including old Windows wallpapers which is what reminded me. I use unironically use the classic Packard Bell tile background on my computers because it reminds me of my grandmother's PC which is one of the first I ever used.

https://www.dvd3000.ca/wp/extra/pb.html

[−] timoteostewart 53d ago
[−] g-mork 53d ago
That etched 3 colour look to this very day remains the peak of modern aesthetic for me. Thought it was so cool and sophisticated when I was 12
[−] unixhero 53d ago
Agreed it is amazing
[−] userbinator 53d ago
Packard Bell is one of those logos that really perplexes me as to what exactly it's supposed to represent. A very stylised "P B" somehow? An ear with an earphone stuck in it? An abstract vacuum tube? A crushed air-cooled engine block?
[−] exidy 53d ago
It's a face, specifically the "face of technology". [0]

[0] https://1000logos.net/packard-bell-logo/

[−] jerbearito 53d ago
These personal collections are always neat to see. I'd like to start my own (beyond scraps in my local Pictures folder) but I'm not sure how to structure it. I might just build a grid of tagged/categorized media, like a chaotic memory palace.
[−] markus_zhang 53d ago
I checked the website and he/she did a lot of really cool stuffs.
[−] thombles 53d ago
If you want your nostalgia in multimedia - https://canyonmid.com/
[−] OCTAGRAM 53d ago
When I could run Windows 3.1, I had no multimedia thing. I have found PC Speaker driver somewhere, and it could play event sounds like start-up, but could not play in ordinary player. Same WAV in player won't play because it is not "event sound". And no MIDI of course. Windows 3.1 was somewhere around, but it was nothing to do there. Graphics on EGA was slow. Windows 3.1 was telling us: if you want your programs to work fast, write them for bare metal, and we were using bare metal programs in DOS and writing bare metal programs for DOS.

First time I heard MIDI was Windows 98 already. Graphics of Windows was still slow compared to DOS, but Windows 98 offered more experience. Other developers were raising questions why do they write slow programs for Windows when they could write fast programs for DOS. From times of sound card arrival I recall that there was a bridge between CD-ROM and soundcard, and DOS Navigator could control playback of CD tracks, and that was they way we had music for ordinary activity.

Most memories about MIDI are related to custom Duke Nukem 3D maps. Custom maps sometimes included custom graphics in ART files and custom music in MIDI format. Duke Nukem 3D is the most recognized MIDI player. In Windows I could download Macromedia Flash file, observe the slide show, think "guys, when will you learn to program?" Exit Windows, run Duke Nukem 3D, wonder why can some programmers deliver real time 3D graphics, and other programmers cannot even draw 2D. Oh, and MIDI plays in the background because Duke Nukem 3D music is MIDI.

[−] user3939382 53d ago
Computers were wondrous and amazing then. Every feature and capability was exciting and full of promise. Now I see node modules, IAM, surveillance, adtech. It’s more like repulsion. Very sad.
[−] vunderba 53d ago
Nice. Kind of wish they'd used a shader to approximate the barrel distortion in the curvature of the Tandy monitor.
[−] Terr_ 53d ago
34 years of nostalgia there. Well, not continuously, but y'know.
[−] perilunar 53d ago
I'm curious about how much bigger the video is than the actual canyon.mid file.
[−] thereticent 53d ago
Love that.

As an aside, that keyboard in particular had the best click I've ever experienced.

[−] BobMcBob 53d ago
I know this isnt related to the post, but does anyone remember the artist or website that had a bunch of cool textures and colorful tiled wallpaper for the early days of linux? think mid-90s.

I've been scratching my head for years and my searches have never found it, but there has to be some white beards here that can recall it.

I remember there were some really cool options available, I believe in a square format for better tiling. If anyone can remember and post a link or archive I would very much appreciate it.

[−] genthree 53d ago
I sort of miss when my way of using GUI desktops involved the wallpaper sometimes being visible. These days It’s all quarter/half/full windows that rarely close, and certainly are never minimized.
[−] malux85 53d ago
One of my hobbies is to install older versions of windows and play around with them a bit - at the moment I have 86Box emulating an old machine with windows 3.11 installed and Visual C++, and I'm writing a little implementaiton of DFT so I can simulate a water molecule. Mostly because I want to go back to the days of when I had a 486 in my bedroom, I finally got a graphical desktop working, and the feeling of joy with the old wallpapers, the clock running, a coding IDE, I spent hours in there learning about memory allocations, functions, OpenGL, such good memories that turned into a lifelong career.
[−] patrickscoleman 53d ago
we have a crt tv with built in vhs in our office and have a bunch of old tapes

one is “Mastering Windows 3.1”

it’s fun to run in the background while working

for your enjoyment, here’s a similar 3.1 tutorial video from that era uploaded to YouTube

https://youtu.be/KRi5mjMgORk?si=OFH7UhOQif5EUCtg

[−] OCTAGRAM 53d ago
Tiles were comparably slow to draw. Windows 3.1 and maybe more recent Windows had a background option called "patterns". These are 8x8 patterns of black-over-something. Second color is customizable. It could be white, but also something else. EGA/VGA hardware specific is that 8 pixel wide repeating stuff can be drawn relatively quickly. Patterns were not inside files. They are probably inside registry? Or ini files?

Whatever. The end result is that patterns are forgotten and omitted from retro background collections.

[−] t1234s 53d ago
back in the 3.11/95 era when doing troubleshooting of slow PC's I would always change the bitmap wallpaper to a solid color. nothing more painful then watching a slow machine waste resources trying to render a desktop background.
[−] montroser 53d ago
Gosh, my brain just got all fuzzy going through those one after the next. Transitioning from the previous era of CGA to 16 colors was so very exciting at the time.
[−] mikestorrent 53d ago
the 256color.bmp looks wrong, it's supposed to look more 3d, because it actually does use the 256 color pallette
[−] Vexs 53d ago
Some time ago I wanted the original MS solitaire playing card files. Wasn't too hard to find a copy of the binary, but the interesting thing to me is it appeared the files were handwritten- a couple possible typos in color and not a single byte longer than they needed to be.
[−] stevage 53d ago
Exactly as I remember - very few of them actually usable as backgrounds because they're so garish.
[−] shellwizard 53d ago
[−] _fw 53d ago
What tickles me is that Andreas put these on GitHub 13 years ago.

That’s long enough in tech to be considered retro in and of itself… let alone the age of these tiled backgrounds!

[−] thowme923874 53d ago
Love this. Do it again, but for the whole package history of propaganda-debian.

Edit: I guess the package still exists, even though many desktop refuse to tile jpg. :/

[−] pieterhg 53d ago
And if you want your nostalgia interactive - https://pieter.com
[−] dkga 53d ago
Boy how I love them all, especially Egypt, which looks like the shekel symbol, and the arches.
[−] tmtvl 53d ago
It's weird that those give me nostalgia when I clearly remember our PC having a monochrome monitor. I wonder if my brain is retrofitting stuff or whether if any of those survived to Windows 98.
[−] wkjagt 53d ago
Funny coincidence. I was just (as in just now) looking for a graphics driver for my old Pentium laptop to get Windows 3.1 to work at the full 800x600 resolution.
[−] spacebuffer 53d ago
the leaves one is really nice.
[−] canyp 53d ago
Peak Windows. Everything went downhill from there.
[−] Levitating 53d ago
Cool! Tiled wallpapers are underrated. They will always work, regardless of resolution and attached monitors.
[−] monday2 53d ago
Delightful! Glad someone posted this
[−] lloydatkinson 53d ago
It's funny that these all look more modern than you typically see on desktops.
[−] wiremine 53d ago
Oh, man, does that bring back the memories!

Thanks for sharing. :-)

[−] Induane 53d ago
It seems to be missing that tiled red brick.
[−] soopypoos 53d ago
Last night I dreamed of flying toasters
[−] gerdesj 53d ago
Sigh ... boots C64 with a rather odd coax to SCART to HDMI daisy-chain video interface. I also have a QSII joystick that I didn't quite manage to ruin playing Daley Thompson decathalon.
[−] gary_cli 53d ago
very good
[−] czemuja 53d ago
thanks bro <3
[−] techhiker41 53d ago
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