Older Machines to Get Retooled Windows
Shorty
Manchester, UK Icrontian
Microsoft Corp. is working on a new Windows-based operating system designed to help companies make older machines run better.
The software, code-named Eiger, will look and feel like much like Windows XP and will be equipped with Service Pack 2, a major security upgrade released last summer, said Barry Goffe, a group product manager for Microsoft's Windows client unit.
The idea behind Eiger came from businesses and school systems that said they couldn't afford to replace an old fleet of computers but wanted machines running Windows 95, Windows 98 or Windows NT to be more secure and easier to manage.
Still in the early stages of development, Eiger will run a bare-bones set of programs directly from the desktop. The list will include the Internet Explorer browser, Windows Media Center, a firewall and antivirus software.
Most other programs, however, will run off a central server.
The Redmond, Wash.-based software giant has distributed preview copies of Eiger to about two dozen customers, but has not said when the software will be released or how much it will cost.
Source: Associated Press
The software, code-named Eiger, will look and feel like much like Windows XP and will be equipped with Service Pack 2, a major security upgrade released last summer, said Barry Goffe, a group product manager for Microsoft's Windows client unit.
The idea behind Eiger came from businesses and school systems that said they couldn't afford to replace an old fleet of computers but wanted machines running Windows 95, Windows 98 or Windows NT to be more secure and easier to manage.
Still in the early stages of development, Eiger will run a bare-bones set of programs directly from the desktop. The list will include the Internet Explorer browser, Windows Media Center, a firewall and antivirus software.
Most other programs, however, will run off a central server.
The Redmond, Wash.-based software giant has distributed preview copies of Eiger to about two dozen customers, but has not said when the software will be released or how much it will cost.
Submitted by Kwitko"Those operating systems we no longer service, so if there's a security vulnerability, we usually don't send out security patches," Goffe said.
Source: Associated Press
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Comments
-drasnor
I know at my highschool, most of the computers were crummy in terms of what they had on the market already, but still had more features then the students would EVER need.
What my HS did was just get new machines from Dell which had 2k or XP already on it and placed those in the labs and libraries where they would get the most use. They then bumped the older ones into the classrooms so each classroom would have several computers, even if they were crappy 133MHz Pentium machines.
This is going to have to be pretty cheap for schools to setup this thing.