; it should never be connected to the modern internet in a simulator or VM. Legacy & Availability End of Life: Official support ended between 2002 and 2004. Modern Relevance:
NT 4.0 introduced the version of Task Manager we still use (mostly) today.
Windows NT 4.0 does not support modern wireless protocols, WPA3 encryption, or modern TLS security certificates.
Before Windows XP, before 2000, there was the tank that was . Released in 1996, it brought the Windows 95 interface to the business world, but with a kernel that just refused to crash.
; it should never be connected to the modern internet in a simulator or VM. Legacy & Availability End of Life: Official support ended between 2002 and 2004. Modern Relevance:
NT 4.0 introduced the version of Task Manager we still use (mostly) today.
Windows NT 4.0 does not support modern wireless protocols, WPA3 encryption, or modern TLS security certificates.
Before Windows XP, before 2000, there was the tank that was . Released in 1996, it brought the Windows 95 interface to the business world, but with a kernel that just refused to crash.