It had been reported[2][3] to be a possible commercial implementation of the OS Singularity, a research project begun in 2003 to build a highly dependable OS whose kernel, device drivers, and application software would all be written in managed code.
It was designed for concurrency, and would run a program spread across multiple nodes at once.
The code name Midori was first discovered through the PowerPoint presentation CHESS: A systematic testing tool for concurrent software.
[7] Another reference to Midori was found in a presentation shown during the Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages & Applications (OOPSLA) October 2012 conference,[8] and a paper[9] from the conference's proceedings.
This article about software created, produced or developed by Microsoft is a stub.