Introducing Windows Server 2008 (Part 2)
1.2. Networking Improvements
The Windows Server 2008 team has made a special effort at improving network performance and efficiency. For the first time, there is a dual-IP layer architecture for native IPv4 and IPv6 support together, simultaneously. (If you've ever configured IPv4 and IPv6 on a Windows Server 2003 machine, you'll know what a pain it is to get them to interoperate without falling all over each other.)
Introducing Windows Server 2008
It all started with Windows NT, Microsoft's first serious entry into the network server market. Versions 3.1 and 3.5 of Windows NT didn't garner very much attention in a NetWare-dominated world because they were sluggish and refused to play well with others. Along came Windows NT 4.0, which used the new Windows 95 interface (revolutionary only to those who didn't recognize Apple's Macintosh OS user interface) to put a friendlier face on some simple yet fundamental architectural improvements.

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