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Microsoft kills third-party Windows client project
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Microsoft Corp. has forced independent developers to close down a project aimed at reviving a Windows client operating system code-named Longhorn.
Windows enthusiasts decided to pick up where Microsoft left off with Longhorn's development in October 2006. "Longhorn" was the name Microsoft had originally used for the client operating system that ultimately became Windows Vista. But the company switched development plans and names midproject, though the company continued to use the "Longhorn" name for the next Windows Server release. That release has since been renamed officially to Windows Server 2008.
The third-party community of independent developers, called Longhorn Reloaded, first began its project with a build called Windows 6.0.4074, which Microsoft released at its Windows Hardware Engineering Conference in 2004. Microsoft never said it actually abandoned the Longhorn client, and many predicted that when the Longhorn Reloaded project began, it likely would run afoul of Microsoft's legal department.
According to a blog posting on the site maintained by Longhorn Reloaded developers, Microsoft sent a cease-and-desist letter to the project leaders asking them to shut it down shortly after the team posted the first release of the project online.
"It deeply saddens me that although Microsoft have [sic] known about this project for many months they only issued us with this notice a few days after we started to distribute" the first release, according to a post earlier this month on joejoe.org.Community. "I am just as sorry as you guys are about this, but we got [sic] to think about the community as a whole first."
Longhorn Reloaded Milestone 1 was released May 19 on the project's Web site, but the post informing users the project has shut down said download links and any threads about the project will no longer be active.
Through its public relations firm, Microsoft said that although the company "actively encourages and supports independent developers to take advantage of the features available in our platform to create their own applications and services," the Longhorn Reloaded project violated Windows end-user licensing.
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