Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.general (
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In news:96C3AB15555A764A18E@66.250.146.159,
Zak <zak@nomail.invalid> typed:
> I was reading an article which said that a term sometimes used
> for
> Windows XP was NT Server (or was it NT Workstation - I forget
> now).
No, it's neither. First of all, although under the hood WIndows
XP is actually Windows NT 5.1, the name "Windows NT" isn't
usually used for it. That term is normally reserved for Windows
NT 4 and earlier.
Secondly the name NT server refers to a particular version of
Windows NT, the server version. If someone says "NT Server," he's
probably referring to Windows NT Server 4.0.
Similarly if someone refers to "NT Workstation," he's probably
referring to the Workstation version of NT 4.0.
Third, Windows XP is a Workstation version, not a Server version.
The current Server version in the XP line is called Windows
Server 2003.
So XP is never called "NT Server." It's also never called "NT
Workstation," even though it is a workstation version of an
operating system in the NT line.
> Can someone explain this and if so then are there particular
> versions
> of Windows which the writer probably had in mind?
I don't know what the writer had in mind, but he's either very
much misinformed or, more likely, you just misunderstood what he
wrote.
--
Ken Blake - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User
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