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IIS 1.0 was initially released as a free add-on for Windows NT 3.51. IIS 2.0 was included with Windows NT 4.0. IIS 3.0, which was included with Service Pack 2 of Windows NT 4.0, introduced the Active Server Pages dynamic scripting environment. [6] IIS 4.0 was released as part of the "Option Pack" for Windows NT 4.0.
Windows Server 2012 includes version 8.0 of Internet Information Services (IIS). The new version contains new features such as SNI, CPU usage caps for particular websites, [46] centralized management of SSL certificates, WebSocket support and improved support for NUMA, but few other substantial changes were made. [47]
Windows Internet Explorer 8 (IE8) is a web browser for Windows.It was released by Microsoft on March 19, 2009, and was the default browser on Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2.
It works with a number of Web servers including Apache HTTP Server, Netscape Enterprise Server, Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS), IBM HTTP Server for i5/OS, IBM HTTP Server for z/OS, and IBM HTTP Server for AIX/Linux/Microsoft Windows/Solaris. It uses port 9060 for connection as the default administration port and port 9080 as the ...
8.0.6001.18702 2001–2009 Windows Embedded POSReady 2009 continued to receive security patches till 2019 NT 4.0, 98, 2000 and ME: 6.0 SP1 1996–2001 95: 5.5 SP2 1995–2000 3.1x and NT 3.51: 5.01 SP2 1995–1999 NT 3.5
Web server software allows computers to act as web servers.The first web servers supported only static files, such as HTML (and images), but now they commonly allow embedding of server side applications.
On IIS 6.0 and lower, pages written using different versions of the ASP framework cannot share session state without the use of third-party libraries. This does not apply to ASP.NET and ASP applications running side by side on IIS 7.
In a May 7, 2003 Microsoft online chat, Brian Countryman, Internet Explorer Program Manager, declared that on Microsoft Windows, Internet Explorer would cease to be distributed separately from the operating system (IE 6 being the last standalone version); [10] it would, however, be continued as a part of the evolution of the operating system, with updates coming bundled in operating system ...