However, Chrome has several drawbacks, the first of which is its Windows-centric technology. Developers who want to create platform-neutral presentations will likely choose other solutions, such as Java or one of the non-Microsoft streaming media formats.

Another drawback is the amount of client processing power that Chrome needs. As the trend toward media-rich content gains momentum, many developers are struggling to design media-rich solutions that work in a client-poor environment. In other words, developers are trying to design solutions that accommodate the lowest common PC denominator: a Pentium PC with an HTML browser. But Chrome requires significant client-side horsepower, making the developers' job next to impossible. Chrome pushes the performance bar so far ahead that mainstream users won't see its benefits until 400MHz Pentium II systems become commonplace.

Chrome's hefty resource requirements and its proprietary link to Windows technology will likely keep it a niche technology for some time. Enterprise customers and independent developers need to consider this fact as they assess Chrome's place in their long-term plans.


Embedded NT to the Rescue?

Microsoft's decision to license component management technology from VenturCom is the first in what many industry analysts are predicting to be a series of aggressive moves by the software giant toward embedding Windows NT into nontraditional computing environments. Microsoft's embedded NT strategy calls for companies to adapt the NT operating system (OS) architecture for specific vertical applications. For example, one scenario that officials at Annasoft Systems (a VenturCom developer) have espoused is a home dialysis machine that lets doctors remotely administer treatment from a Windows-based PC. Other possible scenarios include shop-floor automation and data communications, with NT acting as a process controller or a WAN gateway and router. (For an example of a real-life application, see the story "Compaq Targets PBX Market.")

VenturCom's technology is important because it provides the basis for delivering a component-based version of NT. The company's Component Integrator product lets developers integrate individual service-level components of the NT OS into their customized builds. An Extended Component Kit (ECK) and Real-time Extensions (RTX) kit let developers eliminate NT's dependency on the keyboard and mouse and add realtime control capability.

Some analysts see embedded NT applications as a natural part of NT's evolution from product to platform. For others, the idea of NT running medical equipment is alarming. NT has yet to prove itself as a realtime OS, let alone one capable of keeping people alive. Microsoft still needs to solve programmatic problems in NT, such as what happens when a rogue application or service decides to pop up a dialog box on the server's console. Microsoft also needs to stabilize NT's code, which is in a state of significant flux. Cataloging and putting NT's OS into components will be difficult because NT 5.0 introduces a host of new services and capabilities. So, if you choose to venture into this uncharted territory of embedded NT applications, proceed with caution.


Compaq Targets PBX Market

When Compaq releases its N Series of Proliant servers in the fourth quarter of 1998, the company will be taking Windows NT into the PBX wiring closet. As part of a new program being managed by its Tandem division, Compaq will introduce a series of customized servers targeted specifically at the low- to midrange telecommunications market, especially telephone companies (telcos).

Featuring remote management capabilities and a bundle of Signaling System 7 protocol applications from SignalSoft, Compaq is positioning the new servers as cost-effective solutions for smaller telcos seeking to offer value-added services, such as prepaid calling cards. Other possible applications include location-sensitive billing and emergency roadside assistance.

Compaq is basing the new servers on its Proliant 850, 1600, and 6500 rack-mount servers and adding advanced fault-tolerance features, such as RAID subsystems. However, even a robust hardware platform might not be enough to sell customers on the idea of NT as a telecom solution. Vendors have found selling organization-level NT telecom systems to PBX customers tough enough. Pitching NT as a platform for telco-level applications could be a challenge given the environment's requirement for 99 percent availability. Most current generation NT configurations can boast 90 percent to 95 percent uptime.

Compaq's NT-for-telcos solution demonstrates a growing trend toward embedded, function-specific implementations of the core NT operating system (OS). From routers to gateways to fax servers, the idea of deploying NT as a vertical application server is catching on quickly. (For more information about embedded NT applications, see the story "Embedded NT to the Rescue?" page 45.)

Microsoft now needs to stabilize the NT code base so that overall reliability and availability can be brought up to the levels that telcos and other mission-critical industries require. This improvement won't happen soon. Microsoft has clearly indicated that the need for a stable code base will take a back seat to higher profile issues, such as Windows NT 5.0 and 64-bit computing. So until NT 5.x has been proven in the field (around 2002), customers need to proceed with caution when evaluating NT as a platform for high-availability applications, including telecommunications.

End of Article

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