"Windows NT was first released five years ago as a specialized operating system
for technical and business needs. Today it has proven its value as the preferred
technology for all users who want industry-leading cost-effectiveness, rich security
features and demonstrated scalability," said Jim Allchin, senior vice president
at Microsoft. "The Windows NT kernel will be the basis for all of Microsoft's
PC operating systems from consumer products to the highest-performance servers."
The Windows 2000 line, which Microsoft will begin to roll out in 1999, will include
four products.
Windows 2000 Professional is a desktop operating system aimed at businesses of
all sizes. Microsoft designed Windows 2000 Professional as the easiest Windows yet,
with high-level security and significant enhancements for mobile users. The operating
system is also designed to provide industrial-strength reliability and help companies
lower their total cost of ownership with improved manageability.
Microsoft offers the Windows 2000 Server as the ideal solution for small- to medium-sized
enterprise application deployments, web servers, workgroups and branch offices.
Windows 2000 Server will support new systems with up to two-way SMP; existing Windows
NT Server 4.0 systems with up to four-way SMP can be upgraded to this product.
Windows 2000 Advanced Server is a more powerful departmental and application server
that provides network operating system and Internet services. Supporting new systems
with up to four-way SMP and large physical memories, this product is ideal for database-intensive
work. In addition, Windows 2000 Server integrates clustering and load-balancing
support to provide excellent system and application availability. Organizations
with existing Windows NT 4.0 Enterprise Edition servers with up to eight-way SMP
can install this product.
The Windows 2000 line will also include the new Windows 2000 Datacenter Server,
which is the most powerful server operating system ever offered by Microsoft.
Link to Microsoft PressPass Windows 2000 Datacenter Server supports up to 16-way
SMP and up to 64GB of physical memory, depending on system architecture. Like Windows
2000 Advanced Server, it provides both clustering and load balancing services as
standard features. Microsoft designed this product especially for large data warehouses,
econometric analysis, large-scale simulations in science and engineering, online
transaction processing and server-consolidation projects.
Microsoft believes its new Windows 2000 name will help both its partners and customers.
"The new name also serves our goal of making it simpler for customers to choose
the right Windows products for their needs," said Brad Chase, vice president
at Microsoft. "The new naming system eliminates customer confusion about whether
'NT' refers to client or server technology. Also, with our across-the-board improvements
in ease of use, mobile support and total cost of ownership that provide benefits
to so many users, 'NT' technology is no longer just for high-end workstations."
Microsoft will use the tagline "Built on NT Technology" to help its customers
through the naming transition. The company believes that the Windows 2000 name and
NT tagline will help people to identify which operating system will work best in
their environment.
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