Flava wrote:
As Home versions of Windows go...
Windows 3.1
Windows 3.11
Windows 4 (Windows 95)
Windows 4.1 (Windows 95b)
Windows 5 (Windows 98)
Windows 5.1 (Windows 98 SE)
Windows 6 (Windows 2000)
Windows 6.1 (Windows ME)
Windows 7 (Windows XP)
Windows 8 (Longhorn)
Not quite. Windows 98 and 98SE were still v4.x under the x.x numbering system, although I'm not sure
of their exact v4.x increments. Windows 2000 wasn't designed as a home user version of Windows. It
was primarily designed for business users, since it's actually the next step up from Windows NT4.0.
MS decided to call it Windows 2000 Professional, as opposed to Windows NT5.0, so a lot of home
users thought that, since it's marketed with a year, this was the upgrade from Windows 98/98SE.
Strangely, it seems to me at least, that most of these either didn't notice the word "Professional"
emblazoned on the packaging, or weren't really all that bothered about it
Officially, the next Windows version up from Windows 98 Second Edition designed for home users
was Windows Millenium Editon. You could essentially call it Windows 98 Third Edition, since it was
still mostly built on an updated version of the old MSDOS codebase the Windows 9x was built on.
The x.x style version number on Windows Millenium Edition was actually v4.90. Mind you, since
it was such a notoriously buggy release, I prefer to call it Windows Malignant Edition!
The proper x.x version numbering from Windows ME upwards, should look like this . . .
Windows Millennium Edition = v4.90
Windows 2000 Professional = v5.0
Windows XP (Home/Pro) = v5.1
Windows Server 2003 = v5.2
Windows Longhorn = v6.0
Or to summarize . . .
9x/NT4/Me = v4.x
2000/xp/Srv2003 = v5.x
Longhorn and beyond = v6.x
(EDIT - I see Neil Jones posted his message above, while I was typing this one out!)