Microsoft codenames are the codenames given by Microsoft to products it has in development, before these products are given the names by which they appear on store shelves. Many of these products (new versions of Windows in particular) are of major significance to the IT community, and so the terms are often widely used in discussions prior to the official release. Microsoft usually does not announce a final name until shortly before the product is publicly available. There has been some suggestion that Microsoft may move towards defining the real name of their upcoming products earlier in the product development lifecycle so as to avoid needing product codenames.[1]
[edit] Windows 3.1x/9x | Codename | Preliminary name | Final name | Notes | | Janus | | Windows 3.1 | | | Kato, Sparta | | Windows for Workgroups 3.1 | | | Snowball (LB) | | Windows for Workgroups 3.11 | | | Chicago/Cougar | Windows 4.0 | Windows 95 | Microsoft had the original codename for Windows 95, Cougar. In the 3x build trunk, Microsoft changed the codename to Chicago. This has been proven, as there are dropped hints of Cougar in early Chicago betas (that have been leaked) | | O'Hare | | Internet Explorer, first shipped in Microsoft Plus! for Windows 95 | The codename O'Hare ties into the Chicago codename for Windows 95: O'Hare International Airport is the largest airport in the city of Chicago, Illinois — in Microsoft's words, "a point of departure to distant places from Chicago"[2]. | | Frosting[3] | | Microsoft Plus! for Windows 95 | | | Detroit[4] | | Windows 95 OSR 2 | Named after Detroit, Michigan. A writer for Maximum PC suggested that "Detroit" and other Windows 95-era names were answers to the question posed by Microsoft's "Where do you want to go today?" marketing campaign. | | Nashville | Windows 96 | Windows Desktop Update, Internet Explorer 4.0 | Cancelled upgrade for Windows 95; sometimes referred to in the press as Windows 96. Codename was reused for Internet Explorer 4.0 which incorporated many of the technologies planned for Nashville. | | Memphis | Windows 97, Windows 4.1 | Windows 98 | The codename was the key to activating an easter egg in Windows 98: - open the "Date and Time" control panel;
- go to the "Timezone" page;
- hold the Control key and drag a line with the mouse cursor from Memphis, Egypt (or maybe Cairo, codename of Windows NT 4 - the map is too small to tell) to Memphis, Tennessee. Still holding the Control key, drag another line from Memphis to Redmond, Washington;
- a window opens with the credits for Windows 98.
| | Dolly | | Windows 98 OEM/Corporate image cloning utility | Dolly refers to Dolly the Sheep, the first sheep to be cloned. | | Millennium | Windows Me | Me stands for Millennium Edition | [edit] Windows NT family | Codename | Preliminary name | Final name | Notes | | NT OS/2 | OS/2 3.0 | Windows NT 3.1 | | | Daytona[5] | | Windows NT 3.5 | Named after the Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. | | SUR (Shell Update Release), Cairo[6] | | Windows NT 4.0 | Microsoft originally planned for NT 4.0 to be just a simple "Shell Update Release" to integrate the Windows 95 GUI with Windows NT 3.51's kernel. | | Wolfpack[7] | | Microsoft Cluster Server | | | Hydra[8] | | Terminal Services, Windows Terminal Server | Terminal Server adds "multiheading" support to Windows (the ability to run multiple instances of the graphics subsystem), and the hydra is a mythological monster with multiple heads. | | Impala[9] | | Windows NT 4.0 Embedded | | | Memphis NT
| Windows NT 5.0 | Windows 2000 | A watershed in Windows naming: - first major Windows NT release whose client variant was named "Professional" instead of "Workstation";
- first major Windows NT release without the "NT" designation in the trade name, which caused confusion when Windows Me was released. The original MS-DOS-based Windows line has since been dropped altogether, and Windows NT operating systems since then are simply referred to as "Windows".
| | Asteroid | | Windows 2000 Service Pack 1 | | | Janus | | Windows 2000 64-bit | Same codename as Windows 3.1 | | Neptune | Windows Neptune | Never named | A technology demonstration for post-Windows 2000 | | Whistler | | Windows XP | Named after Whistler, British Columbia, where design retreats were held. | | Mantis[9] | | Windows XP Embedded | Named after the Mantis shrimp | | eHome | | Windows XP Media Center Edition | The Media Center application's filename is actually ehome.exe, and many other files to do with MCE specifically are related to this. | | Freestyle | | Windows XP Media Center Edition 2003 | Name of a terrain rating system in the Whistler-Blackcomb resort. | | Harmony | | Windows XP Media Center Edition 2004 | Name of a ski lift and alpine bowl in Whistler, British Columbia. | | Symphony | | Windows XP Media Center Edition 2005 | Name of an alpine bowl in Whistler, British Columbia. | | Emerald | | Windows XP Media Center Edition 2005 Update Rollup 2 | Name of a ski lift in Whistler, British Columbia. | | Diamond | | Windows Vista Media Center Edition | | | Trainyard | | Windows XP Service Pack 1 | Trainyard was an engineering package of driver updates to ship simultaneously with Windows XP Service Pack 1, the most major of which was support for USB 2.0 which was also ported backwards to Windows 2000. | | Springboard | | Windows XP Service Pack 2 | Name of a ski run on Blackcomb in Whistler, British Columbia. | | Lone Star | | Windows XP Tablet PC Edition 2005 | A branch of the Windows XP Professional Service Pack 2 codebase, featuring enhancements specifically for Tablet PC hardware. | | Whistler Server | Windows .NET Server | Windows Server 2003 | One of many unrelated Microsoft projects of the time to carry a ".NET" designation. See: Microsoft .NET. | | Bobcat | | Windows Small Business Server 2003 | Bobcat is a ski-run on Whistler Mountain. | | Eiger | | Windows Fundamentals for Legacy PCs | A low-end version of Windows XP that is intended to be a thin-client that works with older hardware. Available through Software Assurance program. The Eiger is a mountain in the Bernese Oberland in Switzerland. The Eiger is part of a trio of mountains, The Eiger, The Mönch and The Jungfrau. | | Mönch | | | Similar to Eiger, but supports Windows Mobile devices, Windows Image Acquisition, wireless networking, VPN-s and advanced IP (Internet Protocol) security. The Mönch is a mountain in the Bernese Oberland in Switzerland. The Mönch is part of a trio of mountains, The Eiger, The Mönch and The Jungfrau. | | Longhorn | | Windows Vista | Went gold (RTM) on 8 of November 2006. Named after the Longhorn Bar in the Whistler-Blackcomb resort; initially planned as an "interim release" between "Whistler" and "Blackcomb" (which was "Vienna" and is now Windows 7). | | Mojave | | Windows Vista | Spoof codename used for the Windows Vista "Mojave Experiment" marketing exercise.[10] | | Q, Quattro | | Windows Home Server | Announced at CES 2007. Original project codename was "Quattro" because it was the leader of the project's 4th attempt at building a home server at Microsoft. Renamed to Q once the project moved out of incubation stage. | | Cougar | Windows Small Business Server "Longhorn" | | In development. Cougar is a ski-run on Whistler Mountain. | | Longhorn Server | | Windows Server 2008 | Server equivalent of Windows Vista Service Pack 1, released January 18, 2008.[11] | | Viridian | | Hyper-V | Virtualization update for Windows Server 2008[12] | | Centro | | Windows Essential Business Server | In development. Planned "mid-size" (25-500 PC) edition of Longhorn Server.[11]. | | Blackcomb, Vienna | | Windows 7 | Originally codenamed "Blackcomb" after the Whistler-Blackcomb resort. Renamed to "Vienna" in January 2006 and "Windows 7" in 2008. | | Fiji | Windows Vista Media Center Feature Pack 2008 | Windows Media Center TV Pack 2008 | This will be the first out of band release for Media Center since Windows Vista was released.[13] | | Red Dog | Windows Cloud | Windows Azure | Windows cloud services platform [14] | | Quebec | | Windows Embedded 2011 [15] | Details will be unveiled at PDC 2008 | [edit] Windows CE family | Codename | Preliminary name | Final name | Notes | | Pegasus, Alder[16] | | Windows CE 1.0 | (released November 1996) | | Mercury, Apollo | | Windows CE 2.0 | (released November 1997) | | Birch,[16] Gryphon | | Windows CE 2.1 | | | Wyvern, Jupiter, Orion, Hermes, Goldeneye | | Windows CE 2.11 | | | Cedar,[16] Galileo, Rapier, Merlin, Stinger | | Windows CE 3.0 | (released April 2000) | | Talisker[16] | Windows CE .NET | Windows CE 4.0 | (released January 7, 2002) | | Jameson | | Windows CE 4.1 | (released June 2002) | | McKendric | | Windows CE 4.2 | (released April 23, 2003) | | Ozone | | Windows Mobile 2003 | (released June 23, 2003, powered by Windows CE 4.20) | | Ozone update | | Windows Mobile 2003 SE | (released March 24, 2004, powered by Windows CE 4.21) | | Macallan[16] | | Windows CE 5.0 | (July 9, 2004 | | Magneto | | Windows Mobile 5.0 | Windows Mobile 5.0 was officially announced at Microsoft's Mobile and Embedded Developers Conference 2005 in Las Vegas, May 9-12 2005. (based on Windows CE 5.0) | | Crossbow | Windows Mobile 6.0 | Windows Mobile 6.0 | Update to Mobile 5.0, released in February 12, 2007. | | Yamazaki[16] | Windows CE 6.0 | Windows Embedded CE 6.0 | | | Photon | Windows Mobile 7.0 | | Major update to the platform, merging Smartphone and Pocket PC. Expected in 2010. (based on Windows CE 6.0) | [edit] Media Player family | Codename | Preliminary name | Final name | Notes | | Quartz | ActiveMovie | DirectShow | The implementation is still contained in a DLL called quartz.dll. DirectShow and Windows Media Player first appeared as ActiveMovie and ActiveMovie Player as optional components in Windows 98. | | ActiveMovie Player | Windows Media Player | ActiveMovie was the old name of DirectShow. | | Corona | | Windows Media Player 9 Series | | | Polaris | | Windows Media Player 11 for Windows XP | | | Aurora | | Windows Media Player 11 for Windows Vista | | [edit] Visual Studio family | Codename | Preliminary name | Final name | Notes | | Thunder | | Visual Basic 1.0 | The first version of Visual Basic.[17] The standard dialogs and controls created by the Visual Basic runtime library all have "Thunder" as a prefix of their internal type names (for example, buttons are internally known as ThunderCommandButton). | | Zamboni | | Microsoft Visual C++ 4.1 | After Zamboni, an ice resurfacing machine.[17] | | Escher | | Microsoft Visual Basic 1.0 for MS-DOS | | | Rainier | | Visual Studio .NET 2002 | After Mount Rainier, a large mountain just south of Seattle, visible from most of the metropolitan area. | | Everett | | Visual Studio .NET 2003 | After Everett, a large city near Seattle, which is on the way (from Redmond) to Whidbey Island. | | Saturn | | ASP.NET Web Matrix | Free development tool for ASP.NET Web sites. Predecessor to Visual Web Developer Express Edition. | | Cassini Web Server | | ASP.NET Development Server | The lightweight local Web server that is launched in Visual Studio in order to test Web projects. | | Venus | | Visual Web Developer Express Edition | Named in keeping with a space-oriented theme for ASP.NET developer tool internal names. | | Whidbey | | Visual Studio 2005 | After Whidbey Island in Puget Sound. A little farther from Seattle than Everett. | | Orcas | | Visual Studio 2008 | Named after Orcas Island, located in Puget Sound. Farther still from Seattle. | | Rosario | | | Team System-only release after Visual Studio 2008. Named after the Rosario Strait which passes Orcas Island. It's also the second most important city in Argentina. | | Burton | | Visual Studio Team System | | | Hatteras | Visual Studio Team System's Source Control System | | Named after the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse in the Outer Banks region of North Carolina.[18] | | Ocracoke | Visual Studio Team System load testing suite | | Named after the Ocracoke Island Lighthouse on Ocracoke Island, also in North Carolina.[18] | | Currituck | Team Foundation Work Item Tracking | | Named after the Currituck Beach Lighthouse in Corolla, North Carolina.[18] | | Bodie | Team Foundation Server SDK | | Named after the Bodie Island Lighthouse in North Carolina.[18] | | Whitehorse | Visual Studio Team System's designers for architects. | | Includes Application Designer, Logical Data Center Designer, System Designer, and Deployment Designer. | | Fidalgo | | Visual Studio 2005 Extensions for WinFX | Named after Fidalgo Island, located in Puget Sound in the San Juan Islands. | | Tuscany | | Online version of Visual Studio. | Currently a research project.[19] | | Phoenix | | | A Microsoft research software development kit. | | Hawaii | | | Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 | | Camano | | | Test Case Management Client in VSTS 2010. Named after Camano Island, located in Puget Sound | [edit] Exchange Server Family | Codename | Preliminary name | Final name | Notes | | Spitfire, Touchdown | | Exchange Server 4.0 | "Spitfire" was the name for a server-based successor to Microsoft Mail that would have run on OS/2, using X.400 as its core architecture. When Microsoft changed direction to focus on Windows NT as a server platform, the Spitfire project was retooled (and most of its code scrapped), to become Touchdown. Spitfire's legacy lies in the fact that the 4.x and 5.x versions of Exchange were X.400-based (Exchange 2000 and later were SMTP-based). | | Osmium | | Exchange Server 5.5 | Originally called Iridium, but Microsoft received a cease and desist order from Motorola which already had a project with that code name, so Microsoft chose the previous element in the periodic table. | | Platinum | | Exchange Server 2000 | | | Titanium | | Exchange Server 2003 | | | Exchange 12 | | Exchange Server 2007 | So named so as to fit along with Office 2007's working name, Office 12. | | Exchange 14 | | Exchange Server 2010 | So named so as to fit along with Office 2010's working name, Office 14. | [edit] SQL Server family | Codename | Preliminary name | Final name | Notes | | SQL95 | | SQL Server 6.0 | The first version of Microsoft SQL Server that was designed for Windows NT (the previous version, SQL Server 4.2, was essentially Sybase's SQL Server source code, with minor changes to accommodate platform differences, compiled to run on NT). | | Starfighter | | SQL Server Enterprise Manager | Management tool, included in SQL Server 6.0 - SQL Server 2000 | | Hydra | | SQL Server 6.5 | same as Terminal Services, Terminal Server | | Sphinx[20] | | SQL Server 7.0 | | Plato | | SQL Server 7.0 OLAP Services | (later called Analysis Services, in SQL Server 2000) | | Shiloh | | SQL Server 2000 (32-bit) | (version 8.0) | | Liberty | | SQL Server 2000 (64-bit) | (version 8.0), Intel Itanium based system only | | Rosetta | | SQL Server Reporting Services | | Yukon | | SQL Server 2005 | (version 9.0) | | Laguna | SQL Server CE 3.0 | SQL Server 2005 Mobile Edition | | Katmai / Akadia | | SQL Server 2008[21] | (Version 10) | | Blue | | SQL Report Designer 2.0[22] | This is the stand alone release of the tool for SQL Server Reporting Services. | | Killimanjaro | | SQL Server 2008R2 | [edit] Other server products [edit] Experimental operating systems [edit] Expression suite | Codename | Preliminary name | Final name | Notes | | Lightning, Project 42 | Next Generation Windows Services | Microsoft .NET v1.0 | Project Lightning was the original codename for the Common Language Runtime in 1997.[25] The team was based in building 42, hence Project 42.[26] "Next Generation Windows Services" appeared in the earliest press releases about the upcoming platform.[27] | | COM+ 2.0, COM Object Runtime (COR), Universal Runtime (URT) | | Microsoft .NET Framework v1.0 | The name COM+ is still in use to designate extensions to COM (currently at version 1.5) for resource management, integrated security and transactionality. .NET itself has little in common with COM and COM+. | | WinFX | .NET Framework 3.0 | | | Avalon | | Windows Presentation Foundation | | | HailStorm | | .NET My Services | Project to make MSN-hosted user data available to the same users at non-Microsoft web sites; never released | | Indigo | | Windows Communication Foundation | | | Windows Presentation Foundation/Everywhere | | Silverlight | | | InfoCard | | Windows CardSpace | | | Accelerator | | | Allows developers to use managed code to program GPU's to create highly parallel programmes. | | Astoria | | ADO.NET Data Services | A framework that takes advantage of Windows Communication Foundation and the Entity Data Model (EDM) to allow developers to expose data in the cloud. | | Rotor | | Shared Source Common Language Infrastructure (SSCLI) | | | ParallelFX | | Parallel Extensions to .NET Framework | An extension of the .NET Framework which allows developers to make better use of multi-core and multi-CPU operating environments without much effort. Applications written using ParallelFX will automatically scale to make use of the hardware they are running on. | | Zermatt | | Microsoft Identity Framework | An framework which allows developers to develop claims aware applications and systems. | [edit] MSN/Windows Live | Codename | Preliminary name | Final name | Notes | | A1 | | Windows Live OneCare | Security suite featuring antivirus, antispyware, backup & recovery, and tune-up | | Blackbird | | | Online content authoring technology developed alongside MSN 1.0 but cancelled in favor of HTML and ActiveX | | Kahuna | Windows Live Mail | Windows Live Hotmail | | Kumo | | Bing | Replacement product for Live Search. Widely available June 3, 2009. | | Elroy | Windows Live Mail desktop | Windows Live Mail | | Marvel | | Microsoft Network, as shipped with Windows 95 | | Tornado | | MSN Messenger Service | | Rome | Live Search | | The latest version of Live Search. The first public beta of Live Search was unveiled on March 8, 2006, with the final release on September 11, 2006 replacing MSN Search. | [edit] Xbox 360 | Codename | Preliminary name | Final name | Notes | | Underwater | Blu-Ray 360 Player | | This project was rumored to be created. This Blu-Ray player was planned to compete with the PS3's. | | Blackwater | XBL Cheater Scanning System | | Unknown, Might have not been developed to prevent any privacy issues with Xbox Live Gamers. Existance doubted. | | Falcon | | Xbox 360 motherboard and chipset | Third hardware revision with 65 nm CPU and 90 nm GPU. | | Nitrogen | Xbox 360 Screen Recording Software (Xbox 360 SRS) | | This was a external screen-capturing software for the Xbox 360, The existence of this product even in writing is doubted. | | Firebird | New Xbox Experience | NXE | The NXE was released, and the rumor is that the NXE's pre-announcement codename was Firebird. | | Helium | Xbox 360 Project "Helium" | | A concept in which an Xbox 360 would be able to emulate Windows XP. The project has apparently been scrapped since the release of Vista. | | Jasper | | | Fourth hardware revision with 65 nm CPU and 65 nm GPU. | | Opus | | | Revision of the Falcon motherboard but without an HDMI port. Used to replace Xenon motherboards during repairs. | | Valhalla | | | Future fifth hardware revision with unified 65 nm CPU/GPU chip. | | Xenon | | Xbox 360 processor and codename | Original production motherboard with 90 nm CPU and GPU. | | Xenos | | Xbox 360 GPU and codename | | | Zephyr | | Xbox 360 Elite | Black Xbox 360 console with HDMI port, increased size hard drive, and improved heat dispersal. Second hardware revision. | | | Natal | | | The First generation of an XBox 360 compatible gaming platform that uses unique 3D audio and visual sensors to control input during game play. | [edit] Others | Codename | Preliminary name | Final name | Notes | | Acropolis | | | Application framework for Smart Clients | | Aero Diamond | | | Used during the development of Windows Vista to describe a set of advanced user interface effects for the Desktop Window Manager to be introduced after Vista's release.[28] | | Albany | | Microsoft Equipt | Albany is Microsoft's all-in-one, subscription-based service for office, communication, and security software.[29] | | Alexandria | | Zune Marketplace | An online music store. | | Argo | | Zune | A digital media player. | | Atlas | Ajax implementation in .NET | ASP.NET Ajax | An implementation for ASP.NET of Ajax native to the .NET Framework 2.0. | | Bandit | | Schedule+ 1.0 | Microsoft's first Personal Information Manager | | Bullet | | Microsoft Mail 3.0 | Microsoft's first LAN-based email product written in-house. (Microsoft had earlier purchased Intermail for AppleTalk networks and Network Courier for PC networks.) | | Budapest | | Microsoft Office Communicator Web Access 2005 | | | Catapult | | Microsoft Proxy Server 1.0 | | | Cider | | | Visual Studio designer for building Windows Presentation Foundation applications. Meant to be used by application developers. | | Cirrus | | Access 1.0 | | | Concur | | | Aims to: define higher-level abstractions (above "threads and locks"); for today’s imperative languages; that evenly support the range of concurrency granularities; to let developers write correct and efficient concurrent applications; with lots of latent parallelism; that can be efficiently mapped to the user’s. | | CRM V1.0, Tsunami | | Microsoft CRM version 1.0[30] | The platform was initially code named Tsunami,[30] but once the decision was made to make it an actual product it was just changed to the initials as the initials were enough of a code name.[30] | | Darwin | Microsoft Installer | Windows Installer | [31] | | Danube Phase I | | Microsoft CRM version 1.2[30] | | | Danube Phase II | | Microsoft CRM version 3[30] | | | Deco | | Microsoft PhotoDraw | | | Dryad | | | A Microsoft Research project which aims to design a platform to make developing applications for large-scale distributed computing easier. | | Godot | | Microsoft Layer for Unicode | Named after the play Waiting for Godot (centered around the failure of a man named "Godot" to appear and the endless wait for him), because it was felt to be long overdue.[32] | | Greenwich | Real-Time Communications Server 2003 | Microsoft Office Live Communications Server 2003 | | | Istanbul | | Microsoft Office Communicator 2005 | | | Clarity | LINQ | | Language Integrated Query Language extensions to expose query syntax natively to languages such as Visual Basic .NET and C# | | Maestro | | Microsoft Office Business Scorecard Manager 2005. | | | Media2Go | | Windows Mobile software for Portable Media Centers | Platform built on Windows Mobile found on portable media players.[33][34] | | Metro | | XML Paper Specification (XPS) | | | Milan | | Microsoft Surface | Table-top style computer with multi-touch touchscreen interface. | | Mira | | | Windows CE .NET-based technology for smart displays.[35][36] | | Monaco | | | Music-making program similar to Apple's GarageBand application | | Monad | MSH, Microsoft Shell | Windows PowerShell | Monads, according to philosopher Gottfried Leibniz's monadology, are the ultimate elements of the universe, individual percipient beings, and MSH is similarly composed of small, individual modules the user puts in interrelation. | | Morro[37] | | Microsoft Security Essentials | MSE was codenamed after the Morro de São Paulo beach[38] in Brazil. | | Origami | | Ultra-Mobile PC | | | Omega | | JET Engine | ISAM database engine used in Microsoft Access, a desktop database management system. | | Opus | | Word for Windows | Word for Windows 1.0 for Windows 2.x, named after the penguin in the comic strip Opus. | | Palladium | Trusted Windows | | Effort to develop a small, very secure operating environment within Windows, including curtained memory, trusted input, and graphics. Project renamed to Next-Generation Secure Computing Base, and was never fully implemented. | | Pinball | | High Performance File System | Implemented as an Installable File System when IBM and Microsoft were co developing OS/2. | | Softsled | | | Software based Media Center Extender. | | Springfield | Microsoft Popfly | | Website in Alpha testing stage providing mashup and webpages creation tools, with publishing as Rich Internet Application option. | | Tahiti | | | Supposedly a family of multi-core technologies including an operating system, applications and development tools designed to make better use of today's multi-core CPUs. It is believed that Midori may be a part of this suite of new Microsoft technologies.[39] | | Tahoe | | Sharepoint Portal Server 2001. | | | Titan, Kilimanjaro | | Microsoft CRM version 4[30] | Was originally Kilimanjaro but changed to Titan as Kilimanjaro was too difficult to spell.[30] | | Jasper | | | “Jasper” provides a programming interface to your data that is well-suited to rapid development. When a Jasper program runs, Jasper connects to the database, determines the database schema, and generates corresponding data classes. This generation step does not result in source files; the data classes are compiled in-memory and available for use within the running program. | | Jolt | | Silverlight 1.0 | | | Paxos | Silverlight 1.1 | | | | Wolverine | | TCP/IP Stack for WfW 3.11 | Named after the Wolverine the character from Marvel Comics. | | Oslo | | set of SOA - technologies | http://www.microsoft.com/soa/products/oslo.aspx | | Velocity | | | Distributed Caching for .NET | | Zurich | | Azure | Microsoft's Cloud platform (See Azure Services Platform) | | D | | M | Modelling language | [edit] Toaster In Microsoft jargon, the "toaster" is the hardware equivalent of fictional entities, such as the Contoso company or the Tempuri URI (http://tempuri.org/), used in documentation and sample code as placeholders to be redefined by third-party developers. The convention of calling a fictional hardware device "toaster" is by no means exclusive to Microsoft, but Microsoft formalizes the concept to an unprecedented level: the "toaster" is prominently featured in the Driver Development Kit (DDK), as a fictional hardware device that performs no function but is extremely complex. The "toaster" is removable, plugged in a dedicated bus, it has hotplug support, power management, a customized driver installation procedure, and even UPS functionality. Its device driver implements all the required APIs but no other function, and it's released as a sample "skeleton" driver for developers of actual hardware devices. [edit] References - ^ Brier Dudley (May 2, 2006). "Fun with Microsoft code names". Brier Dudley's blog. The Seattle Times. http://blog.seattletimes.nwsource.com/brierdudley/2006/05/02/. Retrieved 2006-07-23.
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- ^ "Deposition of Bill Gates". U.S. v. Microsoft Special Report. washingtonpost.com. August 27, 1998. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/business/longterm/microsoft/documents/gates0827p2.htm. Retrieved 2006-07-23.
- ^ Mark Edward Soper (October 14, 2008). "Microsoft Unveils the Official Name for "Windows 7"". Maximum PC. http://www.maximumpc.com/article/news/microsoft_unveils_official_name_windows_7. Retrieved 2009-05-23.
- ^ Russinovich, Mark; David Solomon (2005). Microsoft Windows Internals (4th edition ed.). Microsoft Press. p. xx. ISBN 0-7356-1917-4. "The first release of Windows NT was larger and slower than expected, so the next major push was a project called Daytona, named after the speedway in Florida. The main goals for this release were to reduce the size of the system, increase the speed of the system, and, of course, to make it more reliable."
- ^ Microsoft Demonstrates Next-Generation Directory Server
- ^ Davis, Jim (May 20, 1997). "Scalability Day falls short". CNet. http://news.cnet.com/Scalability-Day-falls-short/2100-1001_3-279928.html. Retrieved 2009-05-23.
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- ^ a b Jon Fincher (November 20, 2001). "Getting to Know Windows NT Embedded and Windows XP Embedded". Get Embedded. Microsoft. http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa459171.aspx. Retrieved 2009-05-23.
- ^ The Mojave Experiment
- ^ a b Q&A: Microsoft’s New “Centro” Infrastructure Solution: Steven VanRoekel, director of Microsoft's
- ^ Microsoft’s Viridian is now Hyper-V
- ^ Windows Fiji screenshots leak, final name revealed?
- ^ Microsoft's Red-Dog cloud turns Azure
- ^ Microsoft Delivers Windows 7-Based Windows Embedded Standard 2011 Community Technology Preview
- ^ a b c d e f "The Windows CE New Kernel (PowerPoint presentation)". Microsoft. http://download.microsoft.com/documents/australia/medc2006/Windows_CE6_Architecture_Boling.ppt.
- ^ a b Chris Smith (April 30, 2006). "Some Microsoft codenames". Chris Smith's completely unique view. MSDN Blogs. http://blogs.msdn.com/chrsmith/archive/2006/04/30/Some_Microsoft_codenames.aspx. Retrieved 2006-07-23.
- ^ a b c d Chris Rathjen (November 16, 2004). "Hatteras, Currituck, Ocracoke". MSDN Blogs. http://blogs.msdn.com/crathjen/archive/2004/11/16/258542.aspx. Retrieved 2006-07-23.
- ^ A View from Elsewhere : A "Live" Version of Visual Studio?
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- ^ Microsoft Research Singularity Project
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- ^ "Microsoft Unveils Vision for Next Generation Internet". Microsoft PressPass. Microsoft. June 22, 2000. http://www.microsoft.com/Presspass/press/2000/jun00/forumumbrellapr.mspx. Retrieved 2006-07-23.
- ^ Interview with Tjeerd Hoek, director of user experience design for Windows - istartedsomething
- ^ Microsoft Launches Beta of New All-in-One Service for Consumers
- ^ a b c d e f g Microsoft Dynamics CRM Team Blog : CRM Code Names - A Brief History
- ^ Chris Smith (July 1, 2005). "Windows Installer, The .NET Framework, The Bootstrapper, and You". Chris Smith's completely unique view. MSDN Blogs. http://blogs.msdn.com/chrsmith/archive/2005/07/01/Darwin_the_FX_the_Bootstrapper_and_you.aspx. Retrieved 2006-07-23.
- ^ Michael Kaplan (February 12, 2005). "Why/how MSLU came to be, and more". Sorting It All Out. MSDN Blogs. http://weblogs.asp.net/michkap/archive/2005/02/12/371650.aspx. Retrieved 2006-07-23.
- ^ Microsoft Unveils "Media2Go" Portable Media Player Platform: Intel to Deliver Initial Hardware Reference
- ^ Microsoft Announces Official Name and New ODM Partners For Portable Media Center Devices
- ^ Microsoft Unveils New Home PC Experiences With "Freestyle" and "Mira": New Technologies
- ^ How a Smart Display Works
- ^ Bott, Ed. "How good is Microsoft's free antivirus software?", ZDnet, June 18, 2009, accessed July 6, 2009.
- ^ Schofield, Jack. "Waiting for Morro: Microsoft's free anti-virus software", guardian.co.uk, June 11, 2009, accessed July 6, 2009.
- ^ http://blogs.zdnet.com/microsoft/?p=1485 Tahiti: Microsoft’s ultimate many-core destination
[edit] External links |