Microsoft Merchant Server

Microsoft Merchant Server, released in October 1996,[1] was Microsoft's solution for the growing Business-to-Consumer sales business taking place on the Internet. Only one version was shipped, then its technology was folded into Microsoft Site Server 2.0, Commerce Edition.

Technology

The technology at the heart of Merchant Server originated at a company named eShop Inc., which Microsoft acquired in June 1996.[2] It was primarily built using Python,[3] with additional C++ code to plug into IIS and to run the primary server code as an NT Service.

Microsoft's Active Server Pages was shipped in December 1996,[4] two months after Merchant Server's release, so Merchant Server was unable to use that for page generation. Instead, it incorporated its own custom templating system, similar to the EZT templating system.[5]

The custom templating system was thrown out, and the core technology of Merchant Server was converted into COM Objects to be used by Active Server Pages. This revamp of the system appeared in Site Server 2.0 in early 1997.

Naming

Microsoft chose the name "Merchant Server" because, at that time, Netscape was shipping a product named Commerce Server. To avoid trademark issues, Microsoft needed a different name. When Merchant Server was folded into Site Server, they were able to use the term "Commerce" as a subtitle to the trademarkable "Site Server" name.

In later years, after Netscape's product was no longer in the market, Microsoft was able to return to their original desire and call it Microsoft Commerce Server.

Merchant Server required the Windows NT 4.0 operating systems. It was also dependent on SQL database, such as Microsoft SQL Server or Oracle.

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See also

References

  1. Merchant Server 1.0 announced (press release)
  2. Microsoft Acquires eShop (press release)
  3. Microsoft Ships Python Code, a blog post discussing how Microsoft shipped Python code in 1996
  4. Active Server Pages 1.0, released in December 1996
  5. EZT: EaZy Templating, a templating mechanism written by the same author in later years, following a similar model to the templating used at eShop and then by Merchant Server
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