6.0 - Wince
In the pantheon of operating systems, Windows XP and Windows 7 often steal the spotlight. But hidden in the background—powering everything from industrial robots and GPS navigators to medical infusion pumps and early touchscreen cash registers—was a lean, mean, real-time kernel: .
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Launched by Microsoft in November 2006, WinCE 6.0 wasn't designed for your desktop. It was designed for embedded systems: devices with limited memory, no keyboard, and a requirement to never, ever crash. Let’s dissect what made this OS a surprising workhorse of the late 2000s. First, a critical distinction: Windows CE (Compact Edition) is not a scaled-down version of Windows XP. It is a completely different codebase. While XP was built on the massive NT kernel, CE 6.0 used a unique, modular kernel designed for real-time performance. wince 6.0