Windows Pc Wallpapers Free Windows Pc Wallpaper Nice Pictures Photos Pics Images



Windows Pc Wallpapers Free Windows Pc Wallpaper Nice Pictures Photos Pics Images
windows pc Wallpaper - Thanks for visiting Wallpaperama, We hope you enjoy this windows pc Wallpaper for your PC Desktop Background. If you like this windows pc wallpaper, tell a friend about Wallpaperama. You can even sent this wallpaper of windows pc to your best friend or post your comments on windows pc iphone wallpaper.
Choose Size
Available Sizes
Choose Donwload
windows pc - Windows Pc Wallpapers Free Windows Pc Wallpaper Nice Pictures Photos Pics Images
Wallpaperama Wallpaper Name: windows pc
Wallpaperama Wallpaper Description: 3d graphic for your windows computer pc wallpaper background. it has the 3d logo of colors green, yellow, red and blue.
Wallpaperama Wallpaper Tags:
Wallpaperama Wallpaper Information: www windows pc com www.windowspc.com Desktop Background of windows pc theme wallpaperama windows pc Computer Background windows pc Download windows pc gallery fotolog galleria windows pc Fond décran Fonds De Ecran fonditos windows pc sfondi Gratuit freit gratis <a href="http://www.wallpaperama.com">wallpaperama</a> cool amazing beautiful 1600x1200 280x1024 1024x768 800x600 windows pc
* Name [nombre]                           * eMail (will not be published) [coreo electronico]
     
* Enter Your Reply or Comments:    [commentarios]  


     
this is the members options


# 6076 Reply By richard l staley On Sat Jun 09, 2007 7:26 am
thank you for your free gift
# 3435 Reply By Bitrios On Thu Jul 20, 2006 9:15 am
Microsoft confirmed to that it will deliver the beta 1 version of Longhorn Server on August 3, along with the beta 1 release Internet Explorer 7. Theyll be available along with the beta 1 version of Windows Vista, the next-generation Windows client formerly known as Longhorn, which Microsoft announced Friday morning.The server beta, with a still-to-be-determined moniker, will contain the core operating system foundation and APIs for Longhorn Server. The private beta will be offered to hardware manufacturers, OEMs, IHVs, system builders, ISVs and developers. The build will let them test and plan their own products to work on top of the next-generation server, a Microsoft spokeswoman said.Features of the new server product will include centralized and filtered event logging, image-based setup and deployment, a transactional file system and registry and built-in rights management.While the desktop and server products are being developed together with the same code base, Microsoft plans the final release of Longhorn Server for six to 12 months after the release of Windows Vista. Microsoft is working to release Vista in time to install it on PCs to be sold during the holiday gift season in 2006, and it hopes to deliver the server product in 2007.


In April, Microsoft demonstrated an early version of Windows Vista, showing off virtual folders that dynamically gather files from anywhere on the hard drive that match keywords or other criteria. That functionality originally depended on WinFS, the new storage model. Virtual folders were basically the results of queries to an underlying data store.

"The development team looked at the scenarios for managing stuff on the PC, and found a way to that without this underlying store," he said. The beta 1 release will include the virtual folders that track hierarchical data queries.

Windows Vista will handle the "plumbing" for RSS so that application developers and ISVs will be able to add RSS into the software they build on top of Windows without having to worry about connecting to the operating system, this was analogous to the way Windows offers printer drivers, so that a variety of printers can be attached to the same computer.

The Windows Vista beta would contain the guts of the operating system, designed for developers and IT professionals. "They can make sure it will fit inside their environment and build stuff on it, however, the beta to be more widely available than some of Microsofts early builds.

"For Windows XP, the early betas were very select," Wilcox said. "With this one, it would not shock me if Microsoft made it available to Microsoft Developers Network subscribers."