Microsoft Windows CE 3.0 Windows CE does more than windows. This 32-bit operating system (OS) works equally well in deeply embedded applications such as Internet appliances and handheld devices such ...
in 1998 Microsoft announced its collaboration with Sega on sega's new Dreamcast home video game system according to the press release Microsoft will provide an optimized version of the Microsoft ...
Microsoft has ended support for Windows CE, an operating system you probably thought was already dead, if you knew it had ever existed in the first place. Initially developed to bring a simple ...
Microsoft Wednesday said it is expanding a program that provides access to the source code for its Windows CE .Net operating system, allowing device manufacturers, chip makers and systems integrators ...
A new release of Microsoft Corp.’s Windows CE is poised to make devices more secure, reliable and better at handling multimedia files, Microsoft said Monday. Additionally, Windows CE 5.0 will bring ...
I worked a lot with CE6-8. The OS had a lot of potential but never really got the love it needed. It was clear that it was supported by a team of about 10 people in a company with 10s of thousands of ...
Microsoft Corp. said it has made it easier for developers of mobile handheld computers, IP telephones, industrial controllers and consumer electronics devices to build new products with the latest ...
John T. Mawhinney, Enterprise System Engineer, Peak Technologies, Inc.
Microsoft Corp. last week announced an update to its Windows CE .Net embedded operating system that includes support for the latest IP networking technology and a new beta-test version of its .Net ...
As it looks toward handhelds and cell phones, Microsoft works with chip designer ARM to increase the number of chipmakers tuning their products for Windows CE .Net. Michael Kanellos is editor at large ...
The company lowers the price on Windows CE.Net to encourage developers to squeeze the operating system into consumer electronics devices and industrial equipment. Michael Kanellos is editor at large ...
It was a proto-netbook. It was a palmtop. It was a PDA. It was Windows Phone 7 but not Windows Phone 8, and then it was an embedded ghost. Its parents never seemed to know what to do with it after it ...