windowing system definition
window system
Nearby terms:
Win 95 « Win 98 « winchester « windowing system » window manager » Window RAM » Window Random Access Memory
window manager definition
<operating system> A part of a window system which arranges
windows on a screen. It is responsible for moving and
resizing windows, and other such functions common to all
applications.
Examples from the X Window System are twm, gwm, olwm.
(1994-12-06)
Nearby terms:
Win 98 « winchester « windowing system « window manager » Window RAM » Window Random Access Memory » Windows
Window RAM definition
Window Random Access Memory
Nearby terms:
winchester « windowing system « window manager « Window RAM » Window Random Access Memory » Windows » Windows 1
Window Random Access Memory definition
<hardware, storage> (WRAM, Window RAM) A kind of RAM which
is faster than VRAM.
WRAM is used in the Matrox MGA Millennium video display card
and almost certainly elsewhere.
[More details?]
(1996-06-05)
Nearby terms:
windowing system « window manager « Window RAM « Window Random Access Memory » Windows » Windows 1 » Windows 2
Windows definition
<operating system> See Microsoft Windows, Windows NT.
(1997-11-23)
Nearby terms:
window manager « Window RAM « Window Random Access Memory « Windows » Windows 1 » Windows 2 » Windows 2000
Windows 1 definition
<operating system> The first incarnation of Microsoft
Windows, released in 1985. It took a total of 55
programmer-years to develop, and only allowed tiled windows.
(1996-07-08)
Nearby terms:
Window RAM « Window Random Access Memory « Windows « Windows 1 » Windows 2 » Windows 2000 » Windows/286
Windows 2 definition
<operating system> The second version of Microsoft Windows,
released in 1987. Windows 2 had considerably more features
than Windows 1, such as overlapping windows and icons.
When Windows/386 was released, Windows 2 was renamed
Windows/286.
Nearby terms:
Window Random Access Memory « Windows « Windows 1 « Windows 2 » Windows 2000 » Windows/286 » Windows 2K
Windows 2000 definition
<operating system> (Win2k, W2k, NT5, Windows NT 5.0) An
operating system developed by Microsoft Corporation for
PCs and servers, as the successor to Windows NT 4.0.
Early beta versions were referred to as "Windows NT 5.0".
Windows 2000 was officially released on 2000-02-17.
Windows 2000 is most commonly used on Intel x86 and
Pentium processors, with a DEC Alpha version rumoured.
Unlike Windows NT 4.0, Windows 2000 is not available for
PowerPC or MIPS.
Windows 2000's user interface is very similar to Windows
95 or Windows NT 4.0 with integrated Internet Explorer, or
to Windows 98.
It is available in four flavours:
- Professional: the client version, meant for desktop
workstations, successor to Windows NT Workstation.
- Server: "entry-level" server, designed for small
deployments, and departmental file, print, or intranet
servers.
- Advanced Server: high throughput, larger scale servers
and applications, and small to medium scale websites.
- Data Center Server: software for large-scale server
clusters (in development as of 2000-03-14).
New features in Windows 2000 include:
- Active Directory.
- Greatly improved built-in security mechanisms, including
Kerberos-based authentication, public key support, an
encrypting file system, and IPsec support.
- Integrated web browser - Internet Explorer 5.0.
- Integrated web server - IIS 5.0
- Terminal services for displaying application interfaces on
remote computers (similar to X-Windows).
- File protection that prevents user programs from
accidentally deleting or overwriting critical system files.
- Improved hardware support, including Plug-and-Play, DVD,
IEEE-1394 (FireWire), USB, infra-red, PCMCIA, ACPI,
laptop computers.
- Improved user interface, including a single point to control
the entire system.
- Improved management tools, including remote administration.
Minimum system requirements, according to Microsoft, are
Pentium-133 MHz CPU, 64 MB RAM, 650 MB of hard
disk space. These are for W2K Professional, others require
more.
Many operating systems compete with Windows 2000, including
the Apple MacOS, Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD,
Sun Solaris, IBM AIX, Hewlett-Packard HP-UX, SGI
Irix. Novell's NDS also provides a service similar to
Active Directory.
Windows 2000 will be followed by Windows XP Professional and
Windows 2002.
Home.
Usenet newsgroups: news:microsoft.public.windows2000,
news:comp.os.ms-windows.
(2002-01-28)
Nearby terms:
Windows « Windows 1 « Windows 2 « Windows 2000 » Windows/286 » Windows 2K » Windows 3.0
Windows/286 definition
Windows 2
Nearby terms:
Windows 1 « Windows 2 « Windows 2000 « Windows/286 » Windows 2K » Windows 3.0 » Windows 3.1
Windows 2K definition
Windows 2000
Nearby terms:
Windows 2 « Windows 2000 « Windows/286 « Windows 2K » Windows 3.0 » Windows 3.1 » Windows 3.11
Windows 3.0 definition
<operating system> A complete rework of Microsoft Windows
with many new facilities such as the ability to address memory
beyond 640k. It was released in 1990, and vigorous
development of applications by third parties helped Microsoft
sell over 10 million copies.
(1996-07-08)
Nearby terms:
Windows 2000 « Windows/286 « Windows 2K « Windows 3.0 » Windows 3.1 » Windows 3.11 » Windows/386
Windows 3.1 definition
<operating system> A version of Microsoft Windows with many
improvements over Windows 3.0, including True Type Fonts,
Object Linking and Embedding (OLE) and Mouse Trails for
use with LCD Devices. It also saw the loss of Real Mode,
which meant it would no longer run on Intel 8086 processors
(did anyone ever do this anyway?).
Sometimes described as "stand-alone Windows", in contrast to
Windows for Workgroups 3.1. Windows 3.11 is a free
bug-fix update. 3.1's successors are Windows 95 and
Windows NT.
(1996-07-08)
Nearby terms:
Windows/286 « Windows 2K « Windows 3.0 « Windows 3.1 » Windows 3.11 » Windows/386 » Windows 4GL
Windows 3.11 definition
<operating system> A free minor bug-fix for Windows 3.1.
(1996-07-08)
Nearby terms:
Windows 2K « Windows 3.0 « Windows 3.1 « Windows 3.11 » Windows/386 » Windows 4GL » Windows 94
Windows/386 definition
<operating system> A version of Microsoft Windows released
in late 1987. Windows/386 was basically the same as its
predecessor, Windows/286 (as Windows 2 was renamed), but
with the capability to run multiple MS-DOS applications
simultaneously in extended memory.
(1996-07-08)
Nearby terms:
Windows 3.0 « Windows 3.1 « Windows 3.11 « Windows/386 » Windows 4GL » Windows 94 » Windows 95
Windows 4GL definition
<tool, database> (INGRES/Windows 4GL) A graphical tool running
on top of a workstation's native windowing system, to help
developers to build user interfaces to INGRES applications.
(1996-07-09)
Nearby terms:
Windows 3.1 « Windows 3.11 « Windows/386 « Windows 4GL » Windows 94 » Windows 95 » Windows 98
Windows 94 definition
<operating system, humour> A facetious name for Windows 95,
so called because it was originally meant to ship in 1994.
(1998-09-07)
Nearby terms:
Windows 3.11 « Windows/386 « Windows 4GL « Windows 94 » Windows 95 » Windows 98 » Windows 9X
Windows 95 definition
<operating system> (Win95) Microsoft's successor to their
Windows 3.11 operating system for IBM PCs. It was known
as "Chicago" during development. Its release was originally
scheduled for late 1994 but eventually happened on 11 Jul
1995, followed by Service Release 1 on 1995-12-31 and OSR2
(OEM Service Release 2) on 1996-08-24.
In contrast to earlier versions, Windows 95 is a complete
operating system rather than a graphical user interface
running on top of MS-DOS.
It provides 32-bit application support, pre-emptive
multitasking, threading and built-in networking (TCP/IP,
IPX, SLIP, PPP, and Windows Sockets). It includes
MS-DOS 7.0, but takes over completely after booting. The
graphical user interface, while similar to previous Windows
versions, is significantly improved.
Windows 95 has also been described as "32-bit extensions and a
graphical shell for a 16-bit patch to an 8-bit operating
system originally coded for a 4-bit microprocessor, written by
a 2-bit company that can't stand 1-bit of competition".
The successor to Windows 95 was Windows 98.
(1998-07-19)
Nearby terms:
Windows/386 « Windows 4GL « Windows 94 « Windows 95 » Windows 98 » Windows 9X » Windows Application Binary Interface
Windows 98 definition
<operating system> Microsoft's 1998 update to Windows 95
that adds:
* Hardware support for Universal Serial Bus (USB).
* Internet Connection Sharing (IGC) - multiple PCs share a
single connection to the Internet.
* Microsoft WebTV for Windows - watch TV on your PC.
* Support for new graphic, sound, and multimedia formats.
* Internet Explorer release 5.
* Windows 98 Service Pack - year 2000 updates.
Windows 98 was followed logically by Windows ME but
chronologically by Windows 2000 Professional Edition.
Home.
(2002-01-19)
Nearby terms:
Windows 4GL « Windows 94 « Windows 95 « Windows 98 » Windows 9X » Windows Application Binary Interface » Windows CE
Windows 9X definition
<operating system> A shorthand meaning Windows 95 or
Windows 98.
(2004-03-28)
Nearby terms:
Windows 94 « Windows 95 « Windows 98 « Windows 9X » Windows Application Binary Interface » Windows CE » Windows for Workgroups
Windows Application Binary Interface definition
<operating system, tool> (WABI) A software package from Sun
Microsystems to allow certain Microsoft Windows
applications under the X Window System. Wabi 2.2 runs under
Solaris on SPARC, Intel, and PowerPC. Wabi works by
providing translated versions of the three core Windows
libraries, user.dll, kernel.dll, and gdi.dll which
redirect Windows calls to Solaris equivalents. For code other
than core library calls Wabi either executes the instructions
directly on the hardware, if it is Intel, or emulates them,
either one instruction at a time or by translating a block of
instructions and caching the result (e.g. for a loop).
WabiServer allows the Windows application and X display to
be on different computers.
Overview.
(1997-01-08)
Nearby terms:
Windows 95 « Windows 98 « Windows 9X « Windows Application Binary Interface » Windows CE » Windows for Workgroups » Windows Hardware Quality Labs
Windows CE definition
<operating system> /C E/ A version of the Microsoft Windows
operating system that is being used in a variety of
embedded products, from handheld PCs to specialised
industrial controllers and consumer electronic devices.
Programming for Windows CE is similar to programming for other
Win32 platforms.
Windows CE was developed to be a customisable operating system
for embedded applications. Its kernel borrows much from
other Microsoft 32-bit operating systems, while eliminating
(or replacing) those operating system features that are not
needed for typical Windows CE-based applications. For
example, as on Windows NT, all applications running on
Windows CE run in a fully preemptive multitasking
environment, in fully protected memory spaces.
The Win32 (API) for Windows CE is smaller than the Win32 API
for the other 32-bit Windows operating systems. It includes
approximately half the interface methods of the Windows NT
version of the API. But the Win32 API for Windows CE also
includes features found in no other Microsoft operating
system. The notification API, for example, makes it possible
to handle user or application notification events (such as
timer events) at the operating-system level, rather than in a
running application. The touch screen API and the built-in
support for the Windows CE database are not found in other
Windows operating systems. The touch screen API makes it easy
to manage screen calibration and user interactions for
touch-sensitive displays, while the database API provides
access to a data storage facility.
http://channels.microsoft.com/windowsce/developer/default.htm.
http://channels.microsoft.com/windowsce/developer/technical/default.htm.
(1997-12-20)
Nearby terms:
Windows 98 « Windows 9X « Windows Application Binary Interface « Windows CE » Windows for Workgroups » Windows Hardware Quality Labs » window shopping
Windows for Workgroups definition
<operating system> (WFW, WFWG) A version of Windows 3.1
which works with a network. Although stand-alone 3.1 can be
networked, the installation and configuration is much improved
with Windows for Workgroups (3.1). Windows for Workgroups
3.11 was a significant upgrade to WFW 3.1, adding 32-bit file
access, fax capability and higher performance.
(1996-07-08)
Nearby terms:
Windows 9X « Windows Application Binary Interface « Windows CE « Windows for Workgroups » Windows Hardware Quality Labs » window shopping » Windows Internet Naming Service
Windows Hardware Quality Labs definition
<body, standard> (WHQL) A Microsoft body that produces and
supports the Microsoft Hardware Compatibility Test kit for
current Microsoft operating systems. Products are tested
with the kit to ensure that they meet Microsoft standards for
compatibility with Windows and to qualify to use the
"Designed for Microsoft Windows" logos.
Home.
(2002-11-13)
Nearby terms:
Windows Application Binary Interface « Windows CE « Windows for Workgroups « Windows Hardware Quality Labs » window shopping » Windows Internet Naming Service » Windows Management Interface
window shopping definition
<jargon> A term used among users of WIMP environments like
the X Window System or the Macintosh at the US Geological
Survey for extended experimentation with new window colours,
fonts, and icon shapes. This activity can take up hours
of what might otherwise have been productive working time. "I
spent the afternoon window shopping until I found the coolest
shade of green for my active window borders --- now they
perfectly match my medium slate blue background." Serious
window shoppers will spend their days with bitmap editors,
creating new and different icons and background patterns for
all to see. Also: "window dressing", the act of applying new
fonts, colours, etc.
See fritterware, compare macdink.
[Jargon File]
(1996-07-08)
Nearby terms:
Windows CE « Windows for Workgroups « Windows Hardware Quality Labs « window shopping » Windows Internet Naming Service » Windows Management Interface » Windows ME
Windows Internet Naming Service definition
<networking> (WINS) Software which resolves NetBIOS names to
IP addresses.
[Details?]
(1998-02-14)
Nearby terms:
Windows for Workgroups « Windows Hardware Quality Labs « window shopping « Windows Internet Naming Service » Windows Management Interface » Windows ME » Windows Messaging
Windows Management Interface definition
<Microsoft, system management> (WMI) Microsoft's
implementation of Web-Based Enterprise Management, a DMTF
initiative to establish standards for accessing and sharing
system management information over an enterprise network.
(2005-02-15)
Nearby terms:
Windows Hardware Quality Labs « window shopping « Windows Internet Naming Service « Windows Management Interface » Windows ME » Windows Messaging » windows messaging
Windows ME definition
Windows Millennium Edition
Nearby terms:
window shopping « Windows Internet Naming Service « Windows Management Interface « Windows ME » Windows Messaging » windows messaging » Windows Millennium Edition
Windows Messaging definition
<messaging> Microsoft's Internet electronic mail
application, formerly called Microsoft Exchange.
(1998-07-05)
Nearby terms:
Windows Internet Naming Service « Windows Management Interface « Windows ME « Windows Messaging » windows messaging » Windows Millennium Edition » Windows NT
windows messaging definition
<messaging> An inter-process communication facility usually
provided by vendors of graphical user interfaces for
concurrent operating systems, such as Microsoft, The X
Consortium and Apple.
The system software translates hardware interrupts from
various input devices into messages according to the current
input context (e.g. the active window of the frontmost
application). Each message is a short piece of information.
A message's format depends on its type, which is usually
encoded in its first field. The message is sent to the
client application using some communication protocol
(e.g. shared memory, internal socket, network socket).
The client application dispatches the message and performs any
actions required. The messages can also be sent by client
applications. This provides convenient and flexible
inter-process communication.
(1998-07-06)
Nearby terms:
Windows Management Interface « Windows ME « Windows Messaging « windows messaging » Windows Millennium Edition » Windows NT » Windows NT 3.1
Windows Millennium Edition definition
<operating system> (Windows ME) An update of Microsoft
Windows 98, released in 2000. ME included updates of
packaged software and new software such as Windows Media
Player 7, Windows Movie Maker. It also has an updated
user interface with new colours and icons, but few major
changes. Windows ME was followed by Windows XP.
(2003-05-13)
Nearby terms:
Windows ME « Windows Messaging « windows messaging « Windows Millennium Edition » Windows NT » Windows NT 3.1 » Windows NT 3.5
Windows NT definition
<operating system> (Windows New Technology, NT) Microsoft's
32-bit operating system developed from what was originally
intended to be OS/2 3.0 before Microsoft and IBM ceased
joint development of OS/2. NT was designed for high end
workstations (Windows NT 3.1), servers (Windows NT 3.1
Advanced Server), and corporate networks (NT 4.0 Enterprise
Server). The first release was Windows NT 3.1.
Unlike Windows 3.1, which was a graphical environment that
ran on top of MS-DOS, Windows NT is a complete operating
system. To the user it looks like Windows 3.1, but it has
true multi-threading, built in networking, security, and
memory protection.
It is based on a microkernel, with 32-bit addressing for up
to 4Gb of RAM, virtualised hardware access to fully protect
applications, installable file systems, such as FAT, HPFS
and NTFS, built-in networking, multi-processor support,
and C2 security.
NT is also designed to be hardware independent. Once the
machine specific part - the Hardware Abstraction Layer (HAL)
- has been ported to a particular machine, the rest of the
operating system should theorertically compile without
alteration. A version of NT for DEC's Alpha machines was
planned (September 1993).
NT needs a fast 386 or equivalent, at least 12MB of RAM
(preferably 16MB) and at least 75MB of free disk space.
NT 4.0 was followed by Windows 2000.
Usenet newsgroups: comp.os.ms-windows.nt.setup,
comp.os.ms-windows.nt.misc.
(2002-06-10)
Nearby terms:
Windows Messaging « windows messaging « Windows Millennium Edition « Windows NT » Windows NT 3.1 » Windows NT 3.5 » Windows NT 4
Windows NT 3.1 definition
<operating system> Microsoft's first version of Windows
NT, released in September 1993, price UKP 395, after having
been in beta-test for as long as anyone could remember.
The person responsible for VMS on the DEC VAX [who?] was
also responsible for Windows NT. Incrementing each letter in
VMS yields WNT.
http://www.win2000mag.com/Articles/Index.cfm?ArticleID=4494.
(2000-08-12)
Nearby terms:
windows messaging « Windows Millennium Edition « Windows NT « Windows NT 3.1 » Windows NT 3.5 » Windows NT 4 » Windows NT 5
Windows NT 3.5 definition
<operating system> A much improved version of Microsoft's
Windows NT 3.1. NT is now (July 1996) supplied as "Windows
NT 3.5 Workstation" and "Windows NT 3.5 Server". It has
better OLE support, higher performance and requires less
memory.
(1996-07-08)
Nearby terms:
Windows Millennium Edition « Windows NT « Windows NT 3.1 « Windows NT 3.5 » Windows NT 4 » Windows NT 5 » Windows NT Network Model
Windows NT 4 definition
<operating system> A version of Microsoft's Windows NT
operating system, originally code named "Cairo". It was
supposed to ship in the first half of 1995. Details are
scarce, but it is intended to provide an object-oriented
version of Windows.
(1996-07-09)
Nearby terms:
Windows NT « Windows NT 3.1 « Windows NT 3.5 « Windows NT 4 » Windows NT 5 » Windows NT Network Model » Windows Open Service Architecture
Windows NT 5 definition
Windows 2000
Nearby terms:
Windows NT 3.1 « Windows NT 3.5 « Windows NT 4 « Windows NT 5 » Windows NT Network Model » Windows Open Service Architecture » Windows sockets
Windows NT Network Model definition
<networking> The network model used by Windows NT. The
model has the following layers:
User Applications (e.g. Excel)
{APIs}
File System Drivers
{TDI}
Protocols
{NDIS} v4
NDIS Wrapper
NDIS Card Driver
{Network Adapter Card}
Compare OSI seven layer model.
(1997-11-05)
Nearby terms:
Windows NT 3.5 « Windows NT 4 « Windows NT 5 « Windows NT Network Model » Windows Open Service Architecture » Windows sockets » Windows XP
Windows Open Service Architecture definition
<architecture, library, microsoft> (WOSA) One of the mainstays
of Microsoft Windows: the ethos of abstraction of core
services.
For each extension, Windows Open Services Architecture
defines an API and an SPI, as well as a universal
interface (usually placed in a single DLL) that both comply
to.
These then transparently let the operating system speak to
device drivers, database managers, and other low level
entities.
These extensions include, among others, ODBC (called the
"crowning jewel of WOSA"), TAPI, WOSA/XFS, SAPI and
MAPI, and their supporting services, as well as the
abstraction of access to printers, modems, and networking
services, which run identically over TCP/IP, IPX/SPX, and
NetBEUI.
(2000-08-16)
Nearby terms:
Windows NT 4 « Windows NT 5 « Windows NT Network Model « Windows Open Service Architecture » Windows sockets » Windows XP » window system
Windows sockets definition
<networking, standard> (Winsock) A specification for
Microsoft Windows network software, describing how
applications can access network services, especially TCP/IP.
Winsock is intended to provide a single API to which
application developers should program and to which multiple
network software vendors should conform. For any particular
version of Microsoft Windows, it defines a binary interface
(ABI) such that an application written to the Windows
Sockets API can work with a conformant protocol
implementation from any network software vendor.
Winsock was conceived at Fall Interop '91 during a Birds of a
Feather session.
Windows Sockets is supported by Microsoft Windows, Windows
for Workgroups, Win32s, Windows 95 and Windows NT. It
will support protocols other than TCP/IP. Under Windows
NT, Microsoft will provide Windows Sockets support over
TCP/IP and IPX/SPX. DEC will be implementing
DECNet. Windows NT will include mechanisms for multiple
protocol support in Windows Sockets, both 32-bit and 16 bit.
Mark Towfiq said, "The next rev. of Winsock will not be until
toward the end of 1993. We need 1.1 of the API to become
firmly settled and implemented first."
Windows Sockets API.
or ftp://microdyne.com/pub/winsock or send a message
"help" to either <ftpmail@SunSite.UNC.Edu> or
<ftpmail@DECWRL.DEC.Com>.
Windows Sockets specification.
Currently NetManage (NEWT), Distinct, FTP and Frontier are
shipping Winsock TCP/IP stacks, as is Microsoft (Windows
NT and TCP/IP for WFW), Beame & Whiteside Software (v1.1
compliant), and Sun PC-NFS. Windows 95 has "dial-up
networking" which supports Winsock and TCP/IP.
winsock.dll is available from some TCP/IP stack vendors.
Novell has one in beta for their Lan Workplace for DOS.
Peter Tattam <peter@psychnet.psychol.utas.edu.au> is
alpha-testing a shareware Windows Sockets compliant TCP/IP
stack ftp://ftp.utas.edu.au/pc/trumpet/winsock/winsock.zip.
and ftp://ftp.utas.edu.au/pc/trumpet/winsock/winpkt.com.
The Consummate Winsock App List.
[Adapted from: Aboba, Bernard D., comp.protocols.tcp-ip.ibmpc
Frequently Asked Questions, 1993 Usenet: news.answers,
ftp://netcom1.netcom.com/pub/mailcom/IBMTCP/].
[Current status?]
(1996-06-20)
Nearby terms:
Windows NT 5 « Windows NT Network Model « Windows Open Service Architecture « Windows sockets » Windows XP » window system » Windoze
Windows XP definition
<operating system> Microsoft's version of the Windows
operating system that finally, in 2001[?], merged the
Windows 95} - Windows ME strain with the Windows NT -
Windows 2000 one.
Windows XP Home.
[Summary?]
(2002-06-10)
Nearby terms:
Windows NT Network Model « Windows Open Service Architecture « Windows sockets « Windows XP » window system » Windoze » Wind River Systems
window system definition
Software which allows a workstation's screen to be divided
into rectangular areas which act like a separate input/output
devices under the control of different application programs.
This gives the user the ability to see the output of several
processes at once and to choose which one will receive input
by selecting its window, usually by pointing at it with a
mouse.
Examples are the X Window System, and proprietary systems on
the Macintosh and NeXT, NeWS on Suns and RISC OS on
the Archimedes. See also WIMP.
Nearby terms:
Windows Open Service Architecture « Windows sockets « Windows XP « window system » Windoze » Wind River Systems » winged comments
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