Raymond Chen wrote the original Tweak UI for Windows 95. In a post on his most excellent blog, The Old New Thing, he tells the history of the Windows PowerToys. It’s fun reading, especially given that this is the 10th anniversary of Windows 95. But I’m linking to it here because it also includes this most excellent list of all the other PowerToys that have since snuck out of other groups at Microsoft and are available for various Windows platforms:
- Microsoft PowerToys for Windows XP Tablet PC Edition
- PowerToys for the Pocket PC
- PowerToys Fun Pack
- PowerToys for Microsoft Office OneNote 2003
- Microsoft PowerToys for Windows XP Media Center Edition 2004
- PowerToys for Windows Media Player for Windows XP
- Windows XP Creativity Fun Pack PowerToys Wallpaper Changer
(Plus, of course, the Windows XP PowerToys, which does come from the shell team. The Internet Explorer team originally called their stuff PowerToys, but they later changed the name to Web Accessories, perhaps to avoid the very confusion I’m discussing here.)
Until I read this post, I didn’t know that Raymond also wrote the original Kernel Toys for Windows 95. Nor did I know that Raymond wrote the whimsical blurb that introduced the original PowerToys. But I’m not surprised, given the cleaver, clear writing and insight that is the hallmark of Raymond’s blog.