With Internet commerce and a growing global economy, network operating systems are as critical to the nation's economy as highways or water pipes. Unlike roads, though, there are no uniform ...
ORLANDO, Fla., Oct. 9, 2002 — Microsoft Corp. today announced the results of recent studies1 that show how, cumulatively, enterprise customers may realize savings of billions of dollars by replacing ...
People have been poring over the bad Windows builds that Microsoft accidentally distributed to members of the Windows Insider program last week, and they've found signs that Microsoft is planning to ...
At Microsoft’s Windows Phone Summit in San Francisco this morning, Redmond officially announced Windows Phone 8. The company confirmed what we’ve suspected for many months now: Windows Phone 8 will be ...
(Windows New Technology) An earlier 32-bit operating system from Microsoft for Intel x86 CPUs. Available in client and server versions, Windows NT included built-in networking and preemptive ...
Windows NT is growing in popularity as a business computing solution, but as Rod Desmeules, director of sales at Hummingbird, argues, the OS is no match for Unix in the domain of interoperability.
The extended support phase for Microsoft Corp.’s Windows NT 4.0 Workstation operating system — which will mark its seventh birthday on July 29 — officially came to an end yesterday, as the company had ...
Windows is probably the most consequential software ever created. It for nearly four decades, it has run the computers that we use to learn, create, defend our country, heal the sick, and look at ...
Use Windows NT's System Policy Editor to keep users from changing settings Windows NT users can typically change their background, desktop, Start menu, and other preferences whenever they want.
CTL has released VoiceSupport NT 2.03. It's the newest upgrade to CTL's Windows NT desktop messaging product. Version 2.03 includes text-to-speech, an Internet Web Browser and extended port capacity.
Despite the hype about Windows 2000, you may have asked yourself whether adopting the new features of the forever-delayed OS makes sense. Why would anyone want to migrate an existing Windows NT 4.0 ...
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