
At this point, the panoramic lake wallpaper was removed.īuilds 8175.5 to 8441, 8520, and 9200 (fbl_eeap) TODO: investigate builds 81īy build 8175.5, Theme1 was removed and replaced with a new Nature theme. Reused from builds 7997 to 8064's lock screenīy build 8148, the number of themes went down to just two and they were changed up several wallpapers were removed, while a few new ones were added. These wallpapers were not cropped, so most of them remain at 4:3 aspect ratios rather than 16:10. The theme names remain the same as the original 7 themes despite many not correlating anymore, although there is no Nature theme, so as a result the new wallpapers start at img7.

img0 and img1 from previous builds remained. With the 7 wallpapers being removed, new themes were added, consisting of photography taken by an unknown Microsoft employee. Reused from Windows 7's logon screen, albeit with added compression

Leak warning removed from the wallpaper in favor of one being implemented as a watermark on the desktop By build 8095, the puzzle is no longer present, with the default wallpaper being set to Windows 7's logon background, while a panoramic lake wallpaper has been added as an alternate option all of the Windows 7 regional wallpapers were also removed. By build 8064, Windows 7's leftover wallpapers (except for the regional wallpapers) were removed. Between builds 79, the wallpaper changed several times, each featuring a fractured wordoku puzzle that says "Start me up", with more letters being added in each revision of the wallpaper. let's not leak our hard work" at the top.

By build 7777, this would be replaced with an infamous blue-green gradient wallpaper with the text "shhh. Build 77 changed the default wallpaper back to the one featured in Windows 7's RTM release.

An article about pre-release versions of Windows 8, including alpha, Developer Preview, Consumer Preview, and Release Preview builds.īuild 7700 uses the Windows 7 RC default wallpaper, likely due to being forked from a RC build of Windows 7.
