Microsoft has launched a version of its much trumpeted Windows XP operating system for embedded Intel-based computers in everything from supermarket tills and thin clients through to microwave ovens. The major difference between XP Embedded and the...
Microsoft today unveiled its latest operating system for embedded devices, Windows CE.NET, a mobile version of its .NET initiative. Scott Horn, director of the embedded and appliance platform group at Microsoft, insisted the company had a range of...
The Redmond-based company also announced a six-month, $995 (about £650) promotional price on kits for creating devices using Windows CE .Net and Windows XP Embedded. Microsoft on Tuesday released an update to its version of Windows XP for embedded...
But Scott Horn, marketing director for Microsoft's embedded device division, disagreed, saying that under an earlier programme the source code available to embedded developers and manufacturers "was not all of Windows CE".
The ATI-Microsoft set-top box, which runs the Windows CE .Net operating system, is connected to a television and ferries data back and forth between the television and a PC. It would replace NTFS and FAT32, which are used by Windows XP and earlier...
A high-tech sewing machine Microsoft's Windows CE.Net operating system powers and modern slot machines that run a slimmed-down version of Windows XP were among the products Microsoft cited during a presentation on its plans for embedded devices...