It boggles the mind that we get ever better displays capable of rendering billions or even trillions of colors in ever finer detail, and we use them to render black and white hieroglyphs noone understands.
I've been waiting for neumorphism to take off but it never has. I felt like it was a nice blend of the clean/modern look we have from today's flat designs, but with better ergonomics and shading to help distinguish elements from the background - which flat design struggles with.
I agree, I adore the Windows 2000 icon design. My retro PC runs XP but I've been slowly changing the icons to Windows 2000. Best of both worlds IMO - the classic design of 2000 but the updated kernel and runtimes of XP.
I found a pack containing ALL Windows 2000 icons on Archive.org:
I'm using Safari on Mac this AM. I think my safari is pretty vanilla except for the DuckDuckGo extension, which I believe I have mostly configured to report but not block things.
One of the things that occurred to me lately about icons is that they don't scale. I don't mean in terms of resolution, I mean that demand for software hugely outstrips the supply of icon artists.
One of the ways we've hacked around this is by using web apps for things. On the web, icons aren't mandatory. Apps aren't started using icons but rather by selecting a bookmark or navigating using search/links. If an icon is supplied it's probably a tiny 16x16 icon of the type that's easy to make. There are no standard art styles and the low resolution means it's not critical to have one anyway.
If you imagine that before writing any HTML file you needed to supply a beautiful hi-res icon for it, well, there'd probably be either fewer web pages or way more people using stock icons that aren't really appropriate. But the non-icon oriented UX of browsers means it's not necessary.
When I was first hired, the company was transitioning from Windows 1.x to 3.1. The color icons were pretty cool. We were always behind on OS upgrades. When I retired in 2023, we still had some machines using XP on the intranet.
That's pretty wild. I wonder how many shops or intranets are still running on old NT versions for domain controllers and such. One of my workplaces had a couple Windows 2000 boxes running special medical software circa 2010 and we'd VNC in periodically to restart the services, but otherwise they just kept going and going.
You can see a very clear regression in Windows 10 and later.
Most icons now look like blue-ish non-descript squares now, with no unique visual identifier for the purpose, leading to increased friction and search time for clicking.