The release of Windows NT 3.51 was dubbed "the PowerPC release" at Microsoft. The original intention was to release a PowerPC edition of NT 3.5, but according to Microsoft's David Thompson, "we basically sat around for 9 months fixing bugs while we waited for IBM to finish the Power PC hardware". Editions of NT 3.51 were also released for the
x86,
MIPS, and
Alpha architectures. New features introduced in Windows NT 3.51 include
PCMCIA support,
NTFS file compression, replaceable
WinLogon (
GINA), 3D support in
OpenGL, persistent IP routes when using TCP/IP, automatic display of textual descriptions when the mouse pointer was placed on toolbar buttons ("
tooltips") and support for Windows 95 common controls. In view of the significant difference in the kernel base, Windows NT 3.51 is readily able to run a large number of
Win32 applications designed for
Windows 95. More recent 32-bit applications will not work, as the developers have prevented their application from working with any Windows version earlier than Windows 98, and also because some applications do not work properly with the older Windows NT 3.51 interface. Despite this, Microsoft in their application releases muddied the issue, releasing
32-bit versions of
Microsoft Office right up to
Office 97 (the last version of Microsoft Office supported on NT 3.51), but relying upon
16-bit versions of
Internet Explorer technology from versions
3.0 to
5.0. Web browsers based on and including
Firefox were operable up to version 2.0.0.22, released in April 2009; they required a few manual file updates to work without compromising browsing security. Windows NT 3.51 is the last of the series to be compatible with the
Intel 80386 processor.
NewShell On May 26, 1995, Microsoft released a test version of a shell refresh, named the
Shell Technology Preview, and often referred to informally as "NewShell". This was the first incarnation of the modern Windows GUI with the Taskbar and
Start menu. It was designed to replace the Windows 3.x Program Manager/File Manager based shell with
Windows Explorer-based
graphical user interface. The release provided capabilities quite similar to that of the Windows "Chicago" (
codename for Windows 95) shell during its late beta phases; however, it was intended to be nothing more than a test release. There was a second public release of the Shell Technology Preview, called
Shell Technology Preview Update made available to
MSDN and
CompuServe users on August 8, 1995. Both releases held Windows Explorer builds of 3.51.1053.1. The preview program provided early feedback for the
Shell Update Release, the next major Windows NT version with the new interface built-in, which was released in July 1996 as Windows NT 4.0.
Updates Five
Service Packs were released for NT 3.51, introducing both bug fixes and new features. Service Pack 5, for example, fixed issues related to the
Year 2000 problem. ==Hardware requirements==