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304 points mooreds | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.423s | source
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xeromal ◴[] No.42167034[source]
I love that little nugget of info at the end. You could originally run excel standalone without an OS and it came with windows 2.1 bundled
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simonjgreen ◴[] No.42167941[source]
Most interesting part of the whole thing for me! The later WinPE environments are some of the most overlooked computer environments out there but they were absolutely everywhere. EPOS, ATMs, digital signage, vending machines.

And of course the subject of so many BSOD photos…

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heraldgeezer ◴[] No.42168352[source]
>The later WinPE environments are some of the most overlooked computer environments out there but they were absolutely everywhere. EPOS, ATMs, digital signage, vending machines.

Those are probably CE and not PE?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Embedded_Compact

or Embed based on CE

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_IoT#Embedded_family

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1. epcoa ◴[] No.42169124[source]
Nope. Windows CE was more in the old school “smartphone” (pre iPhone) and PDA, marketed along with a baseline hardware profile and called Pocket PC. Also used in a number of industrial PDAs (think postal service and warehouse scanners), set top boxes. And then various and sundry embedded devices, but usually these tended to be smaller, often battery form factor and/or headless. While x86 a target more often than not, ARM or MIPS. Windows CE was early on pushed for video games on the Sega Dreamcast and a short lived smart car OS called Auto PC. Signage, ATMs (if they weren’t OS/2), and test equipment more often ran bonafide Windows NT on commodity x86.
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2. bri3d ◴[] No.42169474[source]
Triton ATMs very prominently ran Windows CE and then Windows Embedded Compact, the RTOS one that was also under Windows Mobile, not “full” Windows NT.
3. heraldgeezer ◴[] No.42172250[source]
It was probably embedded standard based on NT/XP/7

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_IoT#Embedded_Standard