• DocumentCode
    1374810
  • Title

    Windows 2000: a threat to Internet diversity and open standards?

  • Author

    Chadwick, David

  • Author_Institution
    Salford Univ., UK
  • Volume
    33
  • Issue
    8
  • fYear
    2000
  • fDate
    8/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    107
  • Lastpage
    109
  • Abstract
    Microsoft conceived Windows 2000 as the operating system for the Internet. This gave many people pause for thought, what with Microsoft´s less-than-sterling reputation regarding cohabitation of competitors´ software on their operating system. The Internet is based on open standards and interworking between different systems from different suppliers. If Windows 2000 compromises the Internet´s integrity and ubiquity-two of its primary hallmarks-will it really be the best operating system to base your Internet services on? Some of the new additions to Windows 2000 show that, although Microsoft pays lip-service to the Internet´s sacred tenets of openness and support for standards, it has actually (and sometimes only subtly) removed or subverted these tenets. The Windows 2000 changes appear to subtly exclude technologies from other vendors and make interworking more difficult
  • Keywords
    Internet; graphical user interfaces; open systems; operating systems (computers); software standards; Internet diversity; Microsoft Windows 2000; competitors´ software; integrity; interworking; open standards; operating system; ubiquity; Access protocols; Domain Name System; Java; Libraries; Network servers; Operating systems; Stability; Sun; Web and internet services; Web server;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Computer
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9162
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/2.863989
  • Filename
    863989