A Windows ICO file can contain multiple icons of different sizes and color formats. That feature is something you need to take advantage of here. Windows uses these different icons in various places in the user interface, depending on the size that is required and the color format supported by the machine. If an exact match is not found, it tries to scale one of the existing icons to fit, but this often produces ugly results (or may not be attempted at all, as in your case).
Right now, you only have a single icon in your ICO file: a 128x128 pixel icon that uses 32-bit colors. That's not enough to satisfy all the basic required sizes. In fact, I don't think Windows even uses 128 pixel icons anywhere. The basic sizes that you need are 16, 32, 48, and 256 pixels. You can optionally include a 24x24 pixel icon, which I believe is used for the "Content" view and in certain Start menu layouts. So, in summary:
- 16x16 pixels (e.g. "Small Icons" and "Details" views)
- [optional] 24x24 pixels (e.g. "Content" view)
- 32x32 pixels (e.g. "Medium Icons" view)
- 48x48 pixels (e.g. "Tiles" view)
- 256x256 pixels (e.g. "Extra Large Icons" view)
If you want to support older machines that might not support 32-bit color icons, you also need to include icons in all of the above sizes in lower color formats. You could include all of the color formats, but I find it's sufficient to just have a set of 32-bit and 8-bit color icons in all the required sizes.
You will need a good icon creator to handle this for you, as Microsoft Paint doesn't support creating ICO files that contain multiple icons. I used to recommend IcoFX, but it's no longer free. You can download an older version (1.6.4) various places online, but I'll let you Google for that yourself. If you already have one or the other, Photoshop and the GIMP both support creating ICO files. There are plenty of other choices online; for example this one (although I haven't tried it).
Full versions of Visual Studio do come with an icon editor, but I wouldn't use it. It still doesn't (at least as of VS 2010) properly support 32-bit color icons. The alpha channels get all screwed up.
You can either have your icon editor scale your icons up/down to create all the required sizes, or you can use it to hand-draw the other sizes. Hand drawing (or at least hand manipulation) often produces better results. Scaling a large icon down often makes it unrecognizable. Scaling a smaller icon up often produces jaggies and other ugly visual artifacts.
Since you're using an icon drawn by someone else, you can just download the other sizes from the original link (click the "Other Sizes" tab). I believe the way the FindIcons site is designed, you have to download each size individually as a separate ICO file, and then use your icon editor to copy and paste each of those into a new ICO file.
Further reading:
- Icons, from the Windows Aero UI Guidelines
- Creating Windows XP Icons (an older article that may not be entirely relevant anymore, but still contains some great information)