enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. NetWare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NetWare

    The successor to NetWare, Open Enterprise Server (OES), released in March 2005, offers all the services previously hosted by NetWare 6.5, but on a SUSE Linux Enterprise Server; the NetWare kernel remained an option until OES 11 in late 2011. NetWare 6.5SP8 General Support ended in 2010; Extended Support was available until the end of 2015, and ...

  3. List of products that support SMB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_products_that...

    The list below explicitly refers to "SMB" as including an SMB client or an SMB server, plus the various protocols that extend SMB, such as the Network Neighborhood suite of protocols and the NT Domains suite. Microsoft Windows includes an SMB client and server in all members of the Windows NT family and in Windows 95, Windows 98, and Windows Me.

  4. NetWare Core Protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NetWare_Core_Protocol

    The NetWare Core Protocol (NCP) is a network protocol used in some products from Novell, Inc. It is usually associated with the client-server operating system Novell NetWare which originally supported primarily MS-DOS client stations, but later support for other platforms such as Microsoft Windows, the classic Mac OS, Linux, Windows NT, Mac OS X, and various flavors of Unix was added.

  5. Novell Embedded Systems Technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Novell_Embedded_Systems...

    The idea was to allow various small devices to access Novell NetWare services, provide such services, or use NetWare's IPX protocol as a communications system (and later also TCP/IP). Novell referred to this concept as "Extended Networks", [ 1 ] and when the effort was launched they boasted that they wanted to see one billion devices connected ...

  6. Category:Novell NetWare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Novell_NetWare

    NetWare is a network operating system and the set of network protocols it uses to talk to client machines on the network. Developed by Novell , it was widely used in the late 1980s and early 1990s, but lost much of its market share to Windows NT and Linux .

  7. Novell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Novell

    The successor product to NetWare, Novell Open Enterprise Server (OES), was released in March 2005. OES offers all the services previously hosted by NetWare 6.5, and added the choice of delivering those services using either a NetWare 6.5 or SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9 kernel. [45] The release was aimed to persuade NetWare customers to move ...

  8. Personal NetWare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_NetWare

    Significantly reworked, the product line, codenamed "Smirnoff", became Personal NetWare 1.0 (PNW) in 1994. The ODI/VLM 16-bit DOS client portion of the drivers now supported individually loadable Virtual Loadable Modules (VLMs) for an improved flexibility and customizability, whereas the server portion could utilize Novell's DOS Protected Mode Services (DPMS), if loaded, to reduce its ...

  9. List of IP protocol numbers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_IP_protocol_numbers

    IP-in-IP IP in IP (encapsulation) RFC 2003: 0x05 5 ST Internet Stream Protocol: RFC 1190, RFC 1819: 0x06 6 TCP Transmission Control Protocol: RFC 793: 0x07 7 CBT Core-based trees: RFC 2189: 0x08 8 EGP Exterior Gateway Protocol: RFC 888: 0x09 9 IGP Interior gateway protocol (any private interior gateway, for example Cisco's IGRP) 0x0A 10 BBN-RCC-MON