By
Ina Fried
Tuesday, October 05 2004 10:22 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39196183,00.htm
Microsoft thinks it can ring up more sales
of its operating system by creating a custom version of Windows XP
Embedded aimed at high-tech cash registers.
The company announced plans Monday to release Windows Embedded for
Point of Service, although the software won't ship until the first half
of next year.
Microsoft
software is already used in many retail devices, with analysts
estimating that about 70 percent of machines that have an operating
system use a Microsoft operating system. However, that share is split
among several versions of Windows and even a fair number of DOS-based
machines. Hewlett-Packard and Dell are among the big-name computer makers that offer Windows-based retail terminals.
But Windows is not the only game in town. IBM for example, announced a partnership in January to use SuSE Linux in similar point-of-sale devices.
Many older systems were designed in an era in which terminal software
was never updated. But modern kiosks and point-of-sale devices are
often connected to a network and need both security and networking
features. Microsoft's new OS also will allow support for emerging
technologies, such as RFID.
"That will really help retailers move their point-of-service
systems from 20th to 21st century," said John Starkweather, a product
manager in Microsoft's Windows Embedded unit. Microsoft uses the term
"point-of-service" to refer to point-of-sale devices such as cash
registers and other in-store devices, including kiosks and
self-check-out machines.
Earlier this year, Microsoft launched a "smarter retailing" initiative designed to sell customers on the advantages of more modern Windows systems.
The company hopes that adding a specific retail version of XP
Embedded will boost its effort by giving software developers a single
version of XP to write their applications on. One of the advantages of
Windows Embedded is that the device maker can pick and choose which
parts of the OS to use. The downside of that approach is that software
makers have to do a fair bit of custom work to map their software to
the particular version of Windows Embedded used by each retailer.
Microsoft also plans to add some special features to the retail
OS, including plug-and-play support for add-on devices such as bar-code
scanners and receipt printers. Right now, customers need to make manual
changes to hardware and software settings to use many of these devices.
The point-of-service version will be based on Windows XP
Embedded Service Pack 2, which Microsoft also announced on Monday. The
service pack included an enhanced firewall and other updates found in
the desktop SP2 version, as well as some features unique to the
embedded version.
Among the extra features in Embedded Service Pack 2 will be a
quick-boot option that will allow devices running XP Embedded to turn
on or off in as little as 10 seconds. Past versions of the software
have loaded only as fast as XP on the desktop. "It could be a couple of
minutes," Starkweather said.
The service pack upgrade will make XP Embedded the first OS to
let IT administrators remotely update devices using two Microsoft
management utilities, one for OS updates and the other for downloading
changes to programs on the device. Windows XP Embedded is used in a
range of noncomputer devices, including slot machines and gas pumps.
Microsoft did not give an exact timing for the release of
Windows XP Embedded Service Pack 2, but said it is committed to
releasing it within 90 days of the desktop version, as has been the
company's goal with past releases. A preview version is available now,
Microsoft said.