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Windows Indexing Service: Computer Network, .NET Messenger Service, .NET Remoting
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Dieser Artikel gilt, aufgrund seiner Grösse, beim Versand als 2 Artikel!
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| Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles
available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Windows indexing
service (successor is Windows Search) is a service in the Windows NT
(Separately in free Windows NT 4.0 Option Pack, originally called Index
server), Windows 2000 and later Windows NT-family of operating systems
that allows searching on PCs and corporate computer networks. It is an
operating system level service that maintains an index of most of the
files on a computer and updates them without user intervention.The first
incarnation of the indexing service was shipped in August 1996 as a
content search system for Microsoft's web server software, Internet
Information Services. Its origins, however, date further back to
Microsoft's Cairo operating system project, with the component serving
as the Content Indexer for the Object File System. Cairo was eventually
shelved, and with it OFS, but the content indexing capabilities would go
on to be included as a standard component of later Windows desktop and
server operating systems, starting with Windows 2000, which includes
Indexing Service 3.0. |
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