Windows 8 build 7989

Windows 8 build 7989 is a Milestone 3 build of Windows 8. This build was originally leaked on 2011-06-18 in x64, then on 2020-02-08, an x86 checked/debug version of this build was leaked on BetaArchive.

Features

 * Immersive Internet Explorer
 * Metro login screen
 * Immersive Control Panel
 * Immersive Reader (broken)
 * Charms bar
 * MS Help (depending on the copy of this build, it might need to be installed by running ).

Redpill
A version of Redlock was released on 2020-01-29, unlocking all redpill levels on this build, including the start screen.

Continuing on with the evolution of Metro starting from the build 7973 compiles, in many ways, the unlocked features in this build are a middle ground between the early Milestone 2 Metro of builds 7927 to 7963 and the closer to final looks of builds 8032 and 8056. The Start screen now has the "Start" header, along with the Other Programs UI being replaced with the Applications list. The Charms bar now has a clock appear along with it, along with the Settings charm being redesigned, adding some non-functional toggles for the Power, keyboard, and a placeholder toggle called "VanUI", possibly standing for View Active Networks.

Interestingly, in this build, it is already possible to change the accent color of the start screen, however there are only 2 colors available. To do this, open regedit, go to  and create a DWORD named   and set it's value to 1. Logoff and logon again, the start screen will be a different blue gradient.

When the "Share" button from the charms bar is clicked, a file called shrscr.png is created in the %temp% folder, with a cat and text saying "U can haz no pix" on the top and "GIMME FISH" along a number on the bottom. The "U can haz no pix" is probably a reference to the strict NDA that existed during Windows 8's development, implying no pictures of the build can be shared.

This build is one of the last to include the ability to use the desktop wallpaper as the logon screen background.

EFI
The x64 version of this build appears to not support hardware with EFI, due to being bundled with an x86 7600 WinPE setup. To try and solve this, copy x64 7989's install.wim into an x64 7600/7601 WinPE setup, or deploy the image through DISM - this fix does not work for all UEFI configurations.