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Microsoft spins new embedded OSes
2009-09-22
Microsoft is using today's Embedded Systems Conference (ESC) in Boston to launch three new embedded operating systems. The new products include Windows Embedded CE 6.0 R3, Windows Embedded Enterprise, and Windows Embedded Server, according to the company.
Dallas' address -- still underway when this story was first posted -- was to outline not only the "componentized" version of Windows 7 announced earlier this month, Windows Embedded Standard 2011, but also three additional embedded operating systems (OSes), according to Microsoft. The newly unveiled OSes are as follows:
Windows Embedded CE 6.0 R3 is described by Microsoft as "the next generation platform of the componentized, real-time Windows Embedded CE operating system." It "marks a new paradigm for designers and developers to collaborate, dramatically improve UI capabilities, and reduced development time," the company says. The first significant upgrade to Windows CE since the release of Windows Embedded CE 6.0 R2 in November 2007, the revised operating system continues to run on x86, ARM, MIPS, and Hitachi SuperH processors. A key addition is an "out-of-browser, native code implementation" of Microsoft's Silverlight technology, allowing developers to "dramatically improve user interface capabilities," according to the company. Other added features in Windows Embedded CE 6.0 R3 include the following, according to Microsoft:
Regarding the revised version of IE, Wurster characterized this as "the same basic technology that just shipped with the Zune HD [link]." Windows Embedded CE 6.0 R3 will include a "fully integrated implementation of Flash Lite," allowing display of rich media content on the web, he added. "With the release of Windows Embedded CE 6.0 R3, Microsoft has furthered its commitment to energize the evolution of consumer Internet devices (CIDs), which fall between smartphones and the full-featured, small Windows-based notebooks," Dallas stated. "Microsoft has reaffirmed its investment in the Windows Embedded CE operating system and raised the bar by providing embedded OEMs with access to Visual Studio, Silverlight, Expression Blend and other advanced Microsoft technologies," he added. Windows Embedded Enterprise and Windows Embedded Server Also announced at ESC were updated versions of Microsoft's x86-specific Windows Embedded Enterprise and Windows Embedded Server OSes. As company officials explained, these products are unlike either Windows CE or Windows Embedded Standard in that they're not componentized; rather, they include all the same code as the normal desktop and server editions of Windows sold to enterprise customers. Ashwin Kulkarni, a senior product manager on Microsoft's Windows Embedded product team, explained to WindowsForDevices.com that the Windows Embedded Enterprise and Windows Embedded Server products are designed for OEMs who are not particularly concerned about the size of a device's OS footprint, and who do not want to spend resources on building custom OS images. Both product lines come with licensing restrictions mandating that the standard Windows shell should not be visible to end users; rather, devices need to boot up directly into whatever custom application OEMs want to build, Kulkarni explained. Microsoft says Windows Embedded Enterprise, available as "Windows 7 Professional for Embedded Systems" or "Windows 7 Ultimate for Embedded Systems," includes the following new capabilities:
Availability According to Microsoft, Windows Embedded CE 6.0 R2 plus the new versions of Windows Embedded Server and Windows Embedded Enterprise have all been RTM'ed (released to manufacturing), and should be available to OEMs as early as next week. Windows Embedded Standard 2011, made available as a downloadable CTP (community technology preview) earlier this month, should RTM in the first half of 2010, says Microsoft. More information on Microsoft's Windows Embedded operating systems may be found on the company's website, here. Further information on Windows-specific sessions at ESC Boston may be found on our previous coverage, here. Related stories:
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