SnowBall Posted November 1, 2018 Posted November 1, 2018 (edited) Hi everyone, I figured out a way to get Program Manager from Windows 3.x and Windows NT 3.X running again on Windows 7, 8, 8.1 and 10 (32 Bit and 64 Bit). Here is what you will need to do: 1. Download Program Manager here: https://mega.nz/#!dMsTRKBI!4wDzRrvNlhOGfkOOeUzKJY6zjazrKxs7aVFBY3GAUdY 2. a) Extract and copy it to %SystemRoot%\System32 for 32 Bit Windows. b) Extract and copy it to BOTH %SystemRoot%\System32 and %SystemRoot%\SysWOW64 for 64 Bit Windows. 3. Download the wrapper files here: https://mega.nz/#!NUsh1CqB!1EbQggvisxpUysb_BxWrOfqEBlRPPVv3HuLd3E7GGuQ 4. a) Extract and copy all the files to %SystemRoot%\System32 for 32 Bit Windows. b) Extract and copy all the files to BOTH %SystemRoot%\System32 and %SystemRoot%\SysWOW64 for 64 Bit Windows. 5. [RECOMMENDED] Download Additional apps such as File Manager, Paint Brush, Clock and Classic Control Panel from here: https://mega.nz/#!BU0nnCiR!AGb-uxT0CZxinbS7xwVd2iKeZXoTPPCjSsKNiTguqg4 6. [RECOMMENDED] a) Extract the files and copy to %SystemRoot%\System32 for 32 Bit Windows. b) Extract the files and copy to BOTH %SystemRoot%\System32 and %SystemRoot%\SysWOW64 for 64 Bit Windows. 7. Launch %SystemRoot%\System32\progman.exe 8. DONE! A few points: 1. This apps will display icons of 16 Bit apps which is better than Windows Explorer. 2. This app sadly has limitations on the compatibility with 64 Bit apps and icons of 64 Bit apps won't show. To solve this problem, make a batch file like this: @echo off start *PATH TO PROGRAM* exit and add the batch file to your program group. After that to get the icon back, use Resource Hacker or any other tools to extract the icon and put it in the same folder as your batch file. Click on "Change Icon" and choose the .ico file then tick "Run Minimized" so the command window doesn't pop up. 3. It is possible to add Microsoft Store Apps to Program Manager, but very hard (if you'd like to know, reply below). 4. For 64 Bit edition of Windows, when ever you add a program, the best way is to use a batch file, so it makes sure that your program works. If you tries to put any apps the your System32 folder, place it in the SysWOW64 as well, so it will show up. 5. For 64 Bit edition of Windows, %ProgramFiles% in Program Manager means %SystemDrive%\Program Files (x86) instead of %SystemDrive%\Program Files. 6. To set this as your default shell, open Registry Editor, go to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon and change the value of "Shell" from Explorer.exe to Progman.exe Note: Backup your registry before you start editing! Screenshots: [Below]: Program Manager running on Windows 8 Consumer Preview (32 Bit) [Below]: Program Manager running on Windows 10 Home 1809 (64 Bit) https://ibb.co/nhGF7f https://ibb.co/f6ka7f More Coming Soon... Regards, ShowBall Edited November 5, 2018 by SnowBall Added Download Links Nirav Narang, rossii and mbshare 3 Quote
Nirav Narang Posted November 29, 2018 Posted November 29, 2018 program manager? what is that, never heard of it. it is not microsoft i guess. don't know how to install, no installer, all zip files. i copy progman to sys32 and it throws ma an error. Quote
Jan Krohn Posted November 29, 2018 Posted November 29, 2018 It is Microsoft. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Program_Manager Looking at it makes me feel like setting up a VM with MS-DOS 6.22 and Windows 3.1. I've kept most of my old CD-ROMs from 30 years ago. This could be fun. Nirav Narang 1 Quote
SnowBall Posted November 30, 2018 Author Posted November 30, 2018 Yes, it is from Microsoft and was the shell for Windows 3.x. If you have never heard of Program Manager... You probably never used Windows 3.x. 23 hours ago, Nirav Narang said: don't know how to install, no installer, all zip files. i copy progman to sys32 and it throws ma an error. Do you not know how to extract zipped files and copy it to System32? Copy all the extracted files to System32 and SysWOW64! Launch progman.exe after that. Don't do the registry thing if you don't know what you are doing... I feel like you will mess up your computer if you set it as your default shell. P.S: I might make a video on how to install or simply make an installer for "noobs" like you. Why would you bother trying this out if you don't know that it is (it is from 28 years ago when it was first introduced)? Also, you are on 64 Bit Windows 10, there will be issues with launching app using it. Regards, SnowBall Nirav Narang 1 Quote
Nirav Narang Posted December 1, 2018 Posted December 1, 2018 Great! I installed it and i can run the progman! i want to know what is the registry thing? actually why when ever i try running progman from windows 3.1, it says app can't run on your computer, what did you do to remove the error? Quote
SnowBall Posted January 2, 2019 Author Posted January 2, 2019 Cool, you've done it! On 12/1/2018 at 5:48 PM, Nirav Narang said: Great! I installed it and i can run the progman! i want to know what is the registry thing? actually why when ever i try running progman from windows 3.1, it says app can't run on your computer, what did you do to remove the error? The registry thing is for setting Program Manager as your default shell. The default shell for Windows 95 and above is Windows Explorer (explorer.exe) which is responsible for making the Start Button, the Taskbar and your Desktop appear. After setting Program Manager (progman.exe) as your shell, Start Button, Taskbar and your desktop won't appear anymore, just like Windows 3.x. Backup your registry before doing it and you probably won't like it as your shell. On 12/1/2018 at 5:48 PM, Nirav Narang said: why when ever i try running progman from windows 3.1, it says app can't run on your computer, what did you do to remove the error? You are running "Windows 10 x64" which is 64 Bit and Program Manager from Windows 3.1 is 16 Bit. 64 Bit Windows can run 32 Bit apps (IA-64 probably won't), 32 Bit Windows can run 16 Bit apps, but 64 Bit Windows can't handle 16 Bit apps. How I did it is I took Program Manager from Windows XP (32 Bit) which is a 32 Bit version of the Windows 3.1 Program Manager. Regards, SnowBall Nirav Narang 1 Quote
SnowBall Posted January 25, 2019 Author Posted January 25, 2019 Actually, PROGMAN.EXE from Windows 3.1 works on Windows 10 64 Bit... With my NTVDM. It looks horrible and doesn't even have an icon on my taskbar! Even worst, you can't close it without signing out because it was designed as a shell. A few pictures: 1. Got it running, 2. Things just doesn't work... 3. When you try to close it... End your Windows session? 4. Sure! I'll see whats going to happen... Another dialog? 5. NO! All my unsaved work!!! I probably shouldn't click "Yes" Regards, SnowBall Nirav Narang 1 Quote
Nirav Narang Posted March 24, 2019 Posted March 24, 2019 send it up and I will try. I might be able to fix it so you can use it as normal. I've been trying resource hacker and it can modify exe files without corrupting them. I can also add an icon using resource hacker! also, send your ntvmd up, it looks interesting. Quote
SnowBall Posted March 24, 2019 Author Posted March 24, 2019 Resource Hacker? No, it is for modifying the resources within a 32 or 64 Bit PE (portable executable), it can not modify a 16 Bit NE. Here is the file anyway: https://mega.nz/#!gIFA3aBT!wf2DeMNMcCVzyyCNvcEysODQsB8k77QjDipbTq2CIMY. I don't think you can do anything to it as you probably haven't even used 16 Bit apps before... It has an icon, I am running it on Windows 10 64 Bit, which isn't supposed to run 16 Bit apps at all and because my NTVDM is so buggy it fails to get the icon to display. BTW, if you want to edit the resources within 16 Bit Windows apps, you should try Resource Workshop (it can't handle pre-mswin3.0 16 Bit apps). If you seriously want to edit the content of a 16 Bit NE, use a disassembler to disassemble it and do your modification (resource editors won't change the functionalities of compiled binaries). The end session thing is because 30 years ago, Windows wasn't yet a fully qualified OS, it is more of a software on top of MS-DOS. If you end your session, it will exit Windows without shutting down your computer, you will be in DOS prompt. So, it is not a bug or anything, it will just sign you out... I can't give you my NTVDM (not NTVMD) because it is so buggy and you should try WineVDM which is what my NTVDM based on. Of course WineVDM can't be integrated into Windows as well as my NTVDM but it has less bugs (and won't mess up Windows). Regards, SnowBall Nirav Narang 1 Quote
Nirav Narang Posted March 25, 2019 Posted March 25, 2019 Why the exe you send be doesn't work on win10? it says the app can't run on my pc and i need to check with the publisher? It works on my vm with win 3.1 but does no work here. I tried to open it in resource hacker and it doesn't open. I think ms has a protection so we can't edit that exe. Quote
SnowBall Posted March 25, 2019 Author Posted March 25, 2019 6 minutes ago, Nirav Narang said: Why the exe you send be doesn't work on win10? it says the app can't run on my pc and i need to check with the publisher? It works on my vm with win 3.1 but does no work here. I tried to open it in resource hacker and it doesn't open. I think ms has a protection so we can't edit that exe. You should know the fact that 64 Bit Windows can't run 16 Bit apps and Windows 1.x to Windows 3.x are 16 Bit. If you take a program that is 16 Bit and run it on a 64 Bit Windows, it will give you the error because it lacks a NTVDM which is what allows you to run them on 32 Bit Windows. I did write a NTVDM for Windows 10 64 Bit based on WineVDM and OpenNT's source code which is better at handling older Windows apps such as Windows 1.x apps. It is very buggy and I tried to integrate it into Windows which is not working very well. I can not give you that because it might break your computer and I don't want that to happen. By the look of it, you can just use VirualBox or VMware to run the app. Regards, SnowBall Nirav Narang 1 Quote
Nirav Narang Posted March 25, 2019 Posted March 25, 2019 ok, i got it. when will you be able to send your ntvdm up? Quote
RokeyKokey Posted May 12, 2019 Posted May 12, 2019 Can these damage my PC at all if I simply run them? Quote
SamuelWinCert Posted September 18, 2019 Posted September 18, 2019 How to add Microsoft Store apps on Program Manager? Quote
SnowBall Posted September 19, 2019 Author Posted September 19, 2019 Through batch files. Make a batch file to launch the app and add that batch file to your program group. You might want an icon somewhere to make it look good. Quote
Kristibek Posted April 16, 2020 Posted April 16, 2020 On 1/25/2019 at 12:21 PM, SnowBall said: Actually, PROGMAN.EXE from Windows 3.1 works on Windows 10 64 Bit... With my NTVDM. It looks horrible and doesn't even have an icon on my taskbar! Even worst, you can't close it without signing out because it was designed as a shell. A few pictures: 1. Got it running, 2. Things just doesn't work... 3. When you try to close it... End your Windows session? 4. Sure! I'll see whats going to happen... Another dialog? 5. NO! All my unsaved work!!! I probably shouldn't click "Yes" Regards, SnowBall What do you mean you can't close Program Manager without signing off? You can use Task Manager to close Program Manager without logging off Quote
Kristibek Posted April 16, 2020 Posted April 16, 2020 (edited) I accidentally selected No Title option on Clock app and I don't know how to undo it (It doesn't show icon in taskbar anymore) Edited April 16, 2020 by Kristibek Quote
SnowBall Posted April 17, 2020 Author Posted April 17, 2020 16 hours ago, Kristibek said: I accidentally selected No Title option on Clock app and I don't know how to undo it (It doesn't show icon in taskbar anymore) Try deleting clock.ini in %localappdata%\VirtualStore\Windows. Quote
Him Posted April 25, 2020 Posted April 25, 2020 On 4/17/2020 at 3:27 AM, Kristibek said: I accidentally selected No Title option on Clock app and I don't know how to undo it (It doesn't show icon in taskbar anymore) Double click the clock. Quote
happymacintoshhd Posted December 18, 2020 Posted December 18, 2020 (edited) I know I might be a bit late but I'm having some problems... When I go and create a batch file using note pad, and drag that into program manager, it opens two command prompt windows. One of which goes away again but the other one stays. Strangely when I tried with File Manager it worked for some reason. What am I doing wrong? The way I do it, is I paste the command from above into it, paste the file location and save it as "X.bat" And when I save it I choose any files instead of .txt EDIT: Figured it out. There need to be quotation marks if the folder has multiple words in its name. Edited December 18, 2020 by happymacintoshhd Quote
Kristibek Posted August 7, 2021 Posted August 7, 2021 It doesn't work on Windows 11. It bluescreens the entire system Quote
Del Sydebothom Posted December 13, 2022 Posted December 13, 2022 Is there a way to make this iconify the program groups? Quote
rossii Posted March 23, 2023 Posted March 23, 2023 (edited) there is a decent winfile on github. https://github.com/microsoft/winfile/releases/tag/v10.2.0.0 I love this program manager, nostalgia over drive. I work in IT and I added all my support tools. Now I run progman as my admin account and all my tools are now easy to run elevated. awesome! thanks for this! P.s. if any of you want to use some of Windows built in icons. There are some dll files you can use which give you tons of icons to choose from. The moricons pack gives you some really old skool looking ones. Try one of these packs: C:\Windows\System32\dsadmin.dll C:\Windows\System32\dsuiext.dll C:\Windows\System32\moricons.dll C:\Windows\System32\shell32.dll C:\Windows\System32\imageres.dll Update - some of the dll's cause a graphics glitch. If you restart program manager it goes away. But it wont show the icon. So I used resource hacker to take out the .ico file and this works better. Edited March 23, 2023 by rossii icon packs Quote
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