Skip to main content

Photo of new Windows 9 Start menu leaked?

photo of new windows 9 start menu leaked startmenuleaked
According to a thread on the My Digital Life forum, the above image may be a shot of the revamped Start menu that Microsoft will likely introduce either in Windows 8.1 Update 2, or in Windows 9.

The Start menu in this photo certainly appears to take after the version that Microsoft teased at Build 2014, which you can see below.

windows-8-start-menu-3-650x433

The leaked image is supposedly a screenshot of Windows 8.1 Pro Build 9788 in action. However, that doesn’t necessarily mean that the new Start Menu will appear in the next update of Windows 8.1. As of last week, a Russian leaker of Windows-centric information, who goes by the name of WZor, said that the new Start menu will now be released along with Windows 9, which is rumored for a Spring 2015 launch.

Recommended Videos

However, it’s worth noting that back in April, the same source indicated that the new Start menu would be appearing in the next Windows 8.1 update, which could come sometime this fall. With that in mind, it’s anyone’s guess whether the revamped Start menu will show up in the next Windows 8.1 update, or the next full blown version of Windows. What we do know is that it’s coming, eventually.

Microsoft has already started to make overtures towards desktop users with Windows 8.1 and with Windows 8.1 Update 1 as well. Microsoft released those two updates in October 2013 and April 2014, respectively. The company added a handful of minor functions aimed at charming desktop users, including a psuedo-Start button for the desktop UI, the ability to run Metro apps in the classic desktop UI, a dedicated button for shutting down, restarting, or putting your device to sleep in the Metro UIs Start screen, and more.

While those are welcome changes, Microsoft will need to do a lot more with Windows 9 to win over people who are still clinging to Windows 7 and Windows XP.

Konrad Krawczyk
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Konrad covers desktops, laptops, tablets, sports tech and subjects in between for Digital Trends. Prior to joining DT, he…
Did Microsoft accidentally leak the next version of Windows?
a view of the strange new windows from ignite 2022

A brief glimpse of a desktop. Just a moment to take in what you were looking at. But then it hits you. Did Microsoft accidentally leak its next version of Windows during the company's Ignite event? Many watching the event are asking the same question.
Zac Bowden at Windows Central has done a great job of breaking down what, exactly, you saw. For a moment, there was a Windows desktop with a floating taskbar along the bottom and a Mac-esque Dock along the top, and a floating search box in the center of the screen. 

This is not the first time we’ve seen this design. Microsoft is working on a three-year update cycle and the next version of Windows is known internally as "Next Valley." The user interface shown off briefly at Ignite matches up with what we know about Next Valley. Of course, the update is not due until 2024. 
For starters, the floating taskbar along the bottom of the screen takes direct inspiration from macOS, down to the rounded corners and the frosted glass background. The icons look bigger and brighter, a la macOS. 
Next, the toolbar along the top featured a battery icon, Wi-Fi icon, the date on the right, and weather on the left. All of this was on the same frosted glass background as the taskbar. If you didn’t know better, you might think this was actually a MacBook running Windows.
But the giant floating search bar in the upper-middle of the screen belies that notion. It was pure Microsoft from the icons to search and close to the font in the search box. What it was doing there on the screen is a big question.
Is Microsoft planning on adding a big floating search box to Windows? If so, it could work a lot like Apple’s new Dynamic Island on iPhone. In fact, we’ve seen a leak for Dynamic Island on Mac, and we were not fans. It would take up a lot of usable space, slow the system down with needless animations, and while not being terribly useful. It'll be interesting to see how Microsoft plans to handle it.
This brief glimpse of a strange Windows operating system may have been nothing more than a mock-up of somebody’s idea for Windows. It could have been an experimental concept that accidentally made it into the presentation. Or it could have been an intentional leak of what Microsoft has planned in Next Valley, giving us a glimpse of what's to come.

Read more
Windows 11 2022 Update: the best new features to try out today
Android Apps on Windows 11

Microsoft has announced its first big update to Windows 11, officially named the "Windows 11 2022 Update." It's packed full of features, many of which have been highly anticipated since the initial launch of Windows 11 in 2021.

The annual update touches on a little bit of everything, including user interface, customization, security, accessibility, and even new applications.
Customizable Start Menu

Read more
The Windows 11 2022 update is what we should have seen from the start
A man sits, using a laptop running the Windows 11 operating system.

Windows 11 is getting its first major update since it launched last year, and it brings a lot of new features. From tabs and Task Manager to a built-in video editor, Windows 11 is starting to take shape; it just took us a year to get here.

If you don't remember the disappointing launch of Windows 11 last year, you're lucky. Although Microsoft brought some new features to the OS, it's mostly been a visual reskin of Windows 10. The 2022 update change that -- it makes Windows 11 the OS that we should have had from the beginning.
Features make the difference

Read more