These are hard numbers to nail down, as you had to also purchase licenses for client access. Depending on the edition and number of licenses, the price ranges from about $299 to over $6,000. Different stores could (and still do) charge higher or lower prices for retail and OEM copies as well.
Windows NT came first. NT 4.0 came to manufacturing in 1996, and Win 2000 was released to retail in February of 2000. [Windows 2000 is also known as Windows NT 5.0.]
Microsoft 2000. XP came out following that.
Windows Server 2003.
The only OS I know of that came out in 2003 is "Microsoft Windows Server 2003" which is heavily based off of Windows XP Pro (Though is not considered part of the Windows XP family) and superseded Windows 2000 Server Edition. It was also designed to run on head computers (Servers) that controls domains, workgroups, datacenters (File storage centers), & websites. ~ Kweezy157
Windows 1.0
We're talking Microsoft Windows, right? In backwards order, starting with the newest (current) version: Windows 7 Windows Vista Windows XP Windows ME Windows 98 Second Edition Windows 98 Windows 95 Windows 3.1 Windows 3.0 Windows 2.11 Windows 2.10 Windows 2.03 Windows 1.01 Of course, there are types for almost all of these versions. Like Windows 7 has Home, Business, Ultimate, etc. Vista had Home, Professional, Ultimate, etc. These are just desktop versions of Windows too. There were also "workstation" versions of Windows prior to Windows XP. For example: Windows 3.11 was the workstation version of Windows 3.1 and then NT, NT 3.1 and NT 3.51 came out. Windows NT 4.0 Workstation coincided with Windows 95. Windows 2000 Professional coincided with the Windows 98. And all of this doesn't take into consideration "server" versions of Windows like Windows NT Server, Windows 2000 Server, Windows Server 2003 and Server 2008, etc.
Windows Me is older than Windows XP. Windows Me was launched on September 14, 2000 while Windows XP was released on October 25, 2001.
Only computers running Windows NT or later can have a computer account in a Windows Server 2008 domain; Windows 9x computers cannot. Since Windows 98 came out after Windows NT, the answer is yes. -Brandon
In legacy Windows operating systems such as 2000 came included with game software. These suites included Minesweeper and Solitaire.
Windows NT 3.1 only came in two versions, Windows NT 3.1 and Windows NT 3.1 Advanced Server.
No - after Windows 98 came Windows Me & Windows 2000 - then Windows 7.
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