Windows 3.1 is considered to be more stable and multimedia-friendly in comparison to its predecessor, while its
user interface was reinvigorated.
InfoWorld rated the operating system a "very good" value.
PC Magazine said in 1993, that
accounting software vendors that two years earlier scoffed at Windows compatibility, "are stumbling over each other in their rush to get to market with a Windows product before the competition". Naming Intellisoft's Accounting Vision/32 — the only Windows-based product among the 11 LAN-based packages it evaluated — an Editor's Choice, the magazine concluded that its power and flexibility "should lay to rest any lingering doubts about the suitability of the Windows environment for accounting".
PC Magazine wrote in 1994, that small business accounting software for Windows had substantially fewer features than DOS counterparts: "A potentially serious problem with all Windows applications, accounting packages included", the magazine added, was "the frequency of system crashes—especially when running several applications simultaneously". "The trickle that began two years ago is now a flood: LAN-based Windows accounting systems are here in force",
PC said in 1995 when again evaluating the industry. While the transition was more difficult and slower than expected, every major vendor of multiuser accounting software had some Windows products available, while spending "near zero" on DOS products. Customers' costs also rose, with
Great Plains Software raising prices by up to 25%, and the magazine recommending
80486 or
Pentium-based computers for the new products. Windows for Workgroups received lukewarm reception; it has been praised for its technical design, but it has been also noted as a "business disappointment" due to low sales. Regarding the marketplace, Windows 3.1 received an enthusiastic reception; its retail price sat at $149, and over three million copies of Windows 3.1 were sold in the first three months. The year of Windows 3.1's release was successful for Microsoft, which was named the "Most Innovative Company Operating in the U.S." by
Fortune magazine, while Windows became the most widely used
GUI-based operating system. Microsoft ended its support for Windows 3.1 and Windows for Workgroups on December 31, 2001, although the embedded version of Windows for Workgroups 3.11 was retired on November 1, 2008. The operating system was superseded by
Windows NT 3.1, which was released in 1993, and
Windows 95 in 1995.
DR-DOS compatibility The installer of the beta release used code that checked whether it was running on Microsoft-licensed DOS or another DOS operating system, such as
DR-DOS. It was known as
AARD code, and Microsoft disabled it before the final release of Windows 3.1, though without removing it altogether.
Digital Research, who owned DR-DOS, released a patch within weeks to allow the installer to continue. Memos that were released during the
United States v. Microsoft Corp. antitrust case in 1999 revealed that Microsoft specifically focused it on DR-DOS. When
Caldera bought DR-DOS from
Novell, they brought a lawsuit against Microsoft over the AARD code, which was later settled with Microsoft paying $280 million.
Legacy Windows 3.1 found a niche market as an
embedded operating system after becoming obsolete in the PC world. By 2008, both
Virgin Atlantic and
Qantas employed it for some of the onboard entertainment systems on long-distance jets. It also sees continued use as an embedded OS in retail cash tills. On July 14, 2013,
Linux kernel version 3.11 was officially named "Linux for Workgroups" as a
tongue-in-cheek reference to Windows for Workgroups 3.11. In November 2015, the failure of a Windows 3.1 system in
Orly Airport in Paris, which was responsible for communicating visual range information in
foggy weather to pilots, made operations temporarily cease. Whether the failure was hardware- or software-based is not specified, though the highlighting of the operating system suggests a software failure. In 2016, the
Internet Archive organization released Windows 3.1 as an emulated environment in a
web browser. In January 2024, German state-owned national railway company
Deutsche Bahn posted a job listing for a
system administrator with "knowledge of legacy operating systems". The main responsibilities listed in the post were maintenance of the old system and driver updates. The need for the continued use of Windows 3.11 could apparently be traced back to
Siemens' SIBAS (Siemens Bahn Automatisierungs System) automation system used to control trains. The job post was retracted due to "unfortunate wording". == See also ==