CyberMatrix Timesheets Version 4 Released - openPR (press release)
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CyberMatrix Timesheets Version 4 ReleasedopenPR (press release), Germany - 1 hour agoTimesheets Web runs best on a dedicated Windows NT, 2000, XP or 2003. The client machines require only a web browser. Timesheets CE requires a PocketPC ... |
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The Myth of "MinWin" - InfoWorld
The Myth of "MinWin"InfoWorld, CA - 4 hours agoBy contrast, a default Windows XP Professional installation spawns just over 300 threads across roughly 40 processes. Whittle this down a bit and you can ... |
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Bill Gates: Windows 95 Was 'A High Point' - Slashdot
Bill Gates: Windows 95 Was 'A High Point'Slashdot - May 28, 2008Windows XP's major achievement was to unify those branches into a single NT-based OS that was both shiny enough and compatible enough to serve as a 98/ME ... |
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No XP? Say it Ain't So, Ray! - Windows IT Pro
No XP? Say it Ain't So, Ray!Windows IT Pro, CO - May 28, 2008The last time Microsoft did this was when it forced people off Windows NT 4.0 workstations onto Windows 2000 or XP workstations. ... |
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'You Already Have MinWin' - OS News
'You Already Have MinWin'OS News - May 30, 2008I have written numerous times that there is nothing wrong with the Windows NT kernel currently powering about 90% of the world's desktops. ... |
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misleading article bordering on propaganda - OS News
misleading article bordering on propagandaOS News - May 30, 2008The failure of Microsoft to modernize the Windows NT kernel and instead clinching to legacy code is what is keeping MS ten years behind (Also, ... |
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Platform: Windows 98/ME, Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows XP ... - VNUNet.com
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Are you ready for Windows 7? - InfoWorld
Are you ready for Windows 7?InfoWorld, CA - May 20, 2008Windows 7 will be exactly what the internal Microsoft working title conveys: the seventh (actually fifth) generation of the Windows NT code base -- the same ... |
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Windows Reborn - OS News
Windows RebornOS News - May 30, 2008The kernel for WIndows NT, based on Dave Cutler's work, is sufficient to do the job. The problem lies with backwards compatibility, and the userland design ... |
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RE[5]: Windows DOES need to be rewritten. Start with BS - OS News
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