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You need to compile them on a Windows Server 2003 32 bit, with the bios date set within a specific date range. (talking about the Windows Server 2003 here, and not the XP one since it is less complete)
I agree with the photo from the internet, which brands Blackcomb as Windows XP, version 7.0 (winver.exe). Longhorn in 2002-2003 was branded as Windows XP, version 6.0, and Blackcomb was the successor of Longhorn.
Windows Server 2003. Succeeded by. Windows Server 2008 R2. Windows Server 2008 is an operating system developed by Microsoft, and was released to manufacturing on February 27, 2008. It is the server version of Windows Vista Service Pack 1.
The build was leaked at BetaArchive on 14 August 2011, by an anonymous source along with this bit of information: Build: Windows Server 2003 ".NET Server" (5.2.3790.1232 Professional Beta) Compiled: 19th August 2004
On September 23rd, 2020, the Windows XP Service Pack 1 and Windows Server 2003 source code has been leaked to 4chan. The source code contained the Candy visual style, which was based on the macOS Aqua theme.
Windows Server 2003/5.2.3663.main.020715-1506. Windows Server 2003 build 3663 is known to exist for x86 and ia64, and for several different languages (en-US, de-DE, ja-JP), but only en-US ia64 and de-DE x86 have been leaked. Screenshots exist for:
Windows Server 2003 build 2462 is the official beta 2 of Windows Server 2003. Not much has changed from build 2455. The Chinese language of this build was leaked on BetaArchive on 2015-06-06. An IA-64 version of this build was also leaked on 2018-12-03 by ReflectiaX onto BetaArchive.
Use malwarebytes 3.5 if you want a good antivirus that is somewhat new for XP and server 2003. Also use snapshots if your vm software supports it.
This 3790.1232 can be considered a Windows Server 2003 Post-RTM but this particular build was built by the Winmain lab, odd for a server build. What really happened was the Winmain lab taking .NET Server 5.2.3790.1232 when Microsoft were resetting the Longhorn project and decided to toy around with it.
Mark Lucovsky, Microsoft Distinguished Engineer and Windows Server Architect, explained to Thurrott in 2003: The mechanics of doing this are mind-numbing. We have a main branch of code for the current Windows version, and that branch becomes the source base for hot-fixes and the next service pack.