Windows
NT is a Microsoft Windows personal computer operating system designed for users
and businesses needing advanced capability. NT's technology is the base for the
Microsoft successor operating system, Windows 2000. Windows NT (which may originally
have stood for "New Technology," although Microsoft doesn't say) is
actually two products: Microsoft NT Workstation and Microsoft NT Server. The
Workstation is designed for users, especially business users, who need faster
performance and a system a little more fail-safe than Windows 95 and Windows
98. The Server is designed for business machines that need to provide services
for network-attached computers. The Server is required, together with an
Internet server such as Microsoft's Internet Information Server (IIS), for a
Windows system that plans to serve Web pages.
Windows
NT Workstation: Microsoft says that 32-bit applications run 20% faster on this
system than on Windows 95 (assuming both have 32 megabytes of RAM). Since older
16-bit applications run in a separate address space, one can crash without
crashing other applications or the operating system. Security and management
features not available on Windows 95 are provided. The Workstation has the same
desktop user interface as Windows 95.
Windows
NT Server: The NT Server is probably the second most installed network server
operating system after Novell's NetWare operating system. Microsoft claims that
its NT servers are beginning to replace both NetWare and the various UNIX-based
systems such as those of Sun Microsystems and Hewlett-Packard. NT Server 5.0.
essentially became what was renamed Windows 2000. Notable features of the
Windows 2000 products are:
·
A fully-customizable administrative console that can be based on
tasks rather than files, applications, or users
·
A new file directory approach called Active Directory that lets
the administrator and other users view every file and application in the
network from a single point-of-view.
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·
Dynamic Domain Name Server (DNS), which replicates changes in the
network using the Active Directory Services, the Dynamic Host Configuration
Protocol (DHCP), and the Windows Internet Naming Service (WINS) whenever a
client is reconfigured.
·
The ability to create, extend, or mirror a disk volume without
having to shut down the system and to back up data to a variety of magnetic and
optical storage media.
·
A Distributed File System (DFS) that lets users see a distributed
set of files in a single file structure across departments, divisions, or an
entire enterprise.
·
Close integration with and support for Microsoft's Message Queue
Server, Microsoft Transaction Server, and Internet Information Server (IIS).
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