In February 1994, the PWI Specification Committee sent a draft specification to
X/Open—who rejected it in March, after being threatened by Microsoft's assertion of intellectual property rights (IPR) over the Windows APIs—and the
European Computer Manufacturers' Association (ECMA). In September, now part of an ECMA delegation, they made an informational presentation about the project at the ISO SC22 plenary meeting in The Hague, Netherlands. Their goal was to make it an
ISO standard in order to force Microsoft to comply with it (in Windows) or risk not being able sell to European or Asian governments who can only buy ISO standards-compliant products. In April 1995,
Willows Software, Inc. (formerly
Multiport, Inc.) a Saratoga, California-based
Canopy-funded company, that had been working on Windows to Unix technologies (inherited from then defunct
Hunter Systems, Inc.) since early 1993, joined the
ad hoc ECMA group. This group became Technical Committee 37 in August (about the time
Windows 95 was released). Willows vowed to complete a full draft specification by the end of the year. In October, the draft specification was completed under the name Application Programming Interface for Windows (APIW). This was accepted as ECMA-234 in December and was put on the fast-track program to become an ISO standard. == ISO delay ==