Yesterday, I had the good fortune to spend an hour on the phone with WinGet team lead Demitrius Nelon. He gave me a “slice of life” view into the many and varied kinds of chicken-and-egg problems his team deals with daily. He also helped me improve my understanding of where and how icons come from inside a sixel-enabled terminal session, including those that WinGet shows. And indeed, WinGet iconification is ongoing and spreading, as I saw this morning when I ran a general upgrade command on the recently clean-installed (and properly enabled) ThinkPad X12 Gen 1 tablet.
Why Say: WinGet Iconification Is Ongoing
Take a look at the output for a winget upgrade –all … command from the lead-in graphic. Note the first actual upgrade (for OneDrive) shows an icon in that output stream. This is the first visible evidence I’ve seen running WinGet that the tool is including icons outside of the list –details commands. Very interesting!
Doc Info on list –details
Here’s a big snippet from the release notes for WinGet production version v.1.28.190:
New Feature: ‘list –details’
The new feature enables a new option for the
listcommand,--details. When supplied, the output is no longer a table view of the results but is instead a series ofshowlike outputs drawing data from the installed item.An example output for a single installed package is:
> wingetdev list Microsoft.VisualStudio.2022.Enterprise --details Visual Studio Enterprise 2022 [Microsoft.VisualStudio.2022.Enterprise] Version: 17.14.21 (November 2025) Publisher: Microsoft Corporation Local Identifier: ARP\Machine\X86\875fed29 Product Code: 875fed29 Installer Category: exe Installed Scope: Machine Installed Location: C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio\2022\Enterprise Available Upgrades: winget [17.14.23]If sixels are enabled and supported by the terminal, an icon for the installed package will be shown.
I’m glad to see and understand that the stuff I had to figure out more or less on my own through trial and error is now going explicitly into the public record. For the details on how to enable sixel output in your WinTerm sessions, see last Friday’s how-to blog post Light Up WinGet Icons.
Where to from Here?
I expect to see icons popping up all over WinGet in the coming months. I also expect to see more icons popping up in output streams, as the plumbing falls into place. Right now, only about 20% of WinGet’s packages show icons. But that number’s going to jump for sure. Stay tuned, and I’ll tell you all about it.




