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Windows Search is the successor of the Indexing Service, a content indexing solution originally developed as an optional download for Windows NT 4.0 and Internet Information Services 3.0, designed to gather resources located on Web servers; it is a remainder of the Object File System of the Cairo operating system project that never fully emerged. [3]
The article is named Windows Search because the search platform is named Windows Search and not Windows Desktop Search. WDS refers to the implementation of the platform on XP. The Vista version IS Windows Search. And the successor is WS4 not WDS4. While the XP port might get the update, the platform is still named Windows Search 4.
Windows NT 4.0 is a major release of the Windows NT operating system developed by Microsoft and oriented towards businesses. It is the direct successor to Windows NT 3.51, and was released to manufacturing on July 31, 1996, [1] and then to retail in August 24, 1996, with the Server versions released to retail in September 1996.
Indexing Service was a desktop search service included with Windows NT 4.0 Option Pack [1] as well as Windows 2000 and later. [2] [3] [4] The first incarnation of the indexing service was shipped in August 1996 [1] as a content search system for Microsoft's web server software, Internet Information Services.
Windows 8.1 restores this feature partially although unified search still does not search keywords or metadata like scoped search. Windows Desktop Gadgets introduced in Windows Vista are removed due to security issues associated with the execution of compromised gadgets. [5] [6] Windows 2000, NT 4.0, Server 2003 and 2008 compatibility modes ...
With the release of Windows Vista came Windows Search 3.1. Unlike its predecessors WDS and Windows Search 3.0, 3.1 could search through both indexed and non indexed locations seamlessly. Also, the RAM and CPU requirements were greatly reduced, cutting back indexing times immensely. Windows Search 4.0 is currently running on all PCs with Windows ...
Windows Import Video, a feature in Windows Vista which allowed one to import live or recorded video from a digital video camera and save it to the hard disk, has been removed. [62] The option in Windows Vista to send search queries (keywords) of searches performed in the Control Panel category view to Microsoft has been removed in Windows 7.
A leaked build had version number 4.10.999 (in comparison to Windows 95's 4.00.950, Windows 95 OSR2's 4.00.1111, Windows 98's 4.10.1998, Windows 98 Second Edition's 4.10.2222 A, and Windows ME's 4.90.3000). The project was eventually cancelled as a full release of Windows, with Windows 95 OSR2 being shipped as an interim release instead.