Skip to main content

It’s true! Windows Start button’s return confirmed in Windows 8.1 screen shots

Windows 8.1 Start Button

As Microsoft’s Build conference (June 26 to 28) nears, it’s only natural that we’d be hearing more and more Windows 8.1 rumors, and actually confirming a few of them. Today, we can semi-validate one previously unverified report that the updated operating system will bring back the Start button.

According to Paul Thurrott’s SuperSite for Windows, Microsoft will indeed be bringing back the Start button. You’ll no longer have a need for Start menu apps since Windows 8.1, informally called Windows Blue, is returning the long lost button to its users. In fact, it’ll look very similar to that of Start8, one of our favorite Start menu apps.

Thurrott, who has access to the Milestone Preview build of Windows 8.1, reports that hovering over the Start button will cause it to change colors “with a black background and the accent color used on the flag logo.” It’ll look just like the Start Charm and it cannot be turned off (not that you’d want to after finally getting it back!).

Even more good news is coming with 8.1: you’ll be able to boot straight to the desktop, completely avoiding the Metro-style Windows 8 home screen that so many users detest.

Thurrott also confirmed that in addition to the preloaded backgrounds and colors provided by Microsoft, users will also have the option of having their desktop wallpaper sit behind the Start background, though we wonder why this is a new addition and not something Microsoft made available to begin with. After all, Windows 8 is supposed to be all about customization and making an OS that works for everyone.

As we reported earlier this month, Windows 8.1 will be a free upgrade available as a public preview on the first day of Build, and we can’t wait to get our hands on it. 

[Update 7:10 p.m. EST 5/30/13: Microsoft commented on the Start button as well as other new Windows 8.1 features. Read more about it here.]

Editors' Recommendations

Jennifer Bergen
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Jennifer Bergen is the Computing Section Editor at Digital Trends and is in charge of all things laptops, desktops, and their…
How Windows 7 saved Microsoft from driving over a cliff — twice
Windows 7 Laptop

Windows 7 is dead. And yet, at the time of support ending for Windows 7, 26% of PCs worldwide were still running the nearly 10-year-old operating system. It was a beloved piece of software that people have been clinging to for years.

But Windows 7 also plays an important role in Microsoft's recent history. In two dire times of recent Microsoft history, Windows 7 was the stalwart operating system that kept the legacy of Windows alive and well.
Doing what Vista could not

Read more
Start Menu in Windows 10 still broken after the latest patch
dell 75 4k interactive touch monitor c7520qt review hands on 10

Windows 10 PC owners continue to flock around Reddit, the Microsoft community forum, and Twitter to report that patch KB4517389, distributed on October 8, breaks the Start Menu. Currently, Microsoft’s patch notes state that the company is not aware of any issues.

The latest patch follows another update distributed on October 3, KB4524147, which not only caused Start Menu problems but also triggered an error with the print spooler, forcing print jobs to stop processing. The new October 8 patch aimed at addressing both issues — but feedback indicates that Start Menu woes remain intact.

Read more
Trying to buy a GPU in 2023 almost makes me miss the shortage
Two AMD Radeon RX 7000 graphics cards on a pink surface.

The days of the GPU shortage are long over, but somehow, buying a GPU is harder than ever -- and that sentiment has very little to do with stock levels. It's just that there are no obvious candidates when shopping anymore.

In a generation where no single GPU stands out as the single best graphics card, it's hard to jump on board with the latest from AMD and Nvidia. I don't want to see another GPU shortage, but the state of the graphics card market is far from where it should be.
This generation is all over the place

Read more