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Created page with "{{Short description|TCP/IP stack for Windows 3.x}} '''Trumpet Winsock''' was a TCP/IP software stack for Microsoft Windows 3.x that implemented the Winsock (Windows sockets) API. It was developed by Peter Tattam of Trumpet Software International and distributed as shareware.<ref>Peter Tattam, Trumpet Software International, "Trumpet Winsock" (initial release 1994), archived at the Internet Archive, accessed 1 October 2025.</ref> == History == The first version, 1.0..."
 
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{{Short description|TCP/IP stack for Windows 3.x}}
'''Trumpet Winsock''' was a TCP/IP software stack for Microsoft Windows 3.x that implemented the [[Winsock]] (Windows sockets) API. It was developed by Peter Tattam of Trumpet Software International and distributed as shareware.<ref>Peter Tattam, Trumpet Software International, "Trumpet Winsock" (initial release 1994), archived at the Internet Archive, accessed 1 October 2025.</ref>
'''Trumpet Winsock''' was a TCP/IP software stack for Microsoft Windows 3.x that implemented the [[Winsock]] (Windows sockets) API. It was developed by Peter Tattam of Trumpet Software International and distributed as shareware.<ref>Peter Tattam, Trumpet Software International, "Trumpet Winsock" (initial release 1994), archived at the Internet Archive, accessed 1 October 2025.</ref>



Latest revision as of 21:56, 1 October 2025

Trumpet Winsock was a TCP/IP software stack for Microsoft Windows 3.x that implemented the Winsock (Windows sockets) API. It was developed by Peter Tattam of Trumpet Software International and distributed as shareware.[1]

History

The first version, 1.0A, appeared in 1994 and became widely used among dial-up users and small ISPs because it allowed Windows machines to connect to the Internet via modem.[2]

In 1996 a 32-bit edition was released to extend compatibility with newer systems.[3]

A notable legal case was Trumpet Software Pty Ltd. v OzEmail Pty Ltd., in which OzEmail was accused of distributing the software without proper credit to the author.[4]

See also

References

  1. Peter Tattam, Trumpet Software International, "Trumpet Winsock" (initial release 1994), archived at the Internet Archive, accessed 1 October 2025.
  2. "What It Was Like To Build A World Wide Web Site In 1995", Fast Company, 18 November 2015.
  3. "Trumpet launches 32-bit 'sock'", Australian Financial Review, July 1996.
  4. Chris Reed, Internet Law: Text and Materials, 2nd ed., Cambridge University Press, p. 70.