![]() There were other updates, of course, but WordPad looks anachronistic in modern Windows versions, like some vestigial reminder of the past. WordPad was introduced in Windows 95 as a replacement for Write, which was bundled with all previous Windows versions dating back to the original in 1985, and it had two major updates over the years: the ability to open Microsoft Word documents in Windows XP (2001) and a ribbon user interface in Windows 7 (2009). ![]() There’s no reason to be outraged by this decision, as WordPad has been out-of-date for years and is barely usable for its intended purpose, which was to replace to view and edit rich text files (RTF, or *.rtf). ![]()
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