OS/2 Warp 3

OS/2 Warp 3, also known as OS/2 3.0 or simply OS/2 Warp as it was introduced (or "better DOS than DOS itself" according to IBM), is a version of OS/2 released in October 1994. With its 32-bit Windows NT-like mode as well as backward compatibility with DOS, earlier OS/2, and even Windows applications, it became quite popular for businesses, however Windows NT continued to maintain a large part of the market share, outperforming OS/2. It had its own web browser, called IBM WebExplorer and many applications were developed for it.

This version is available in both the x86 and PowerPC architectures, and is the only version of OS/2 that was developed for the PowerPC architecture. The PowerPC edition of this version is actually a prerelease of IBM's scrapped Workplace OS project, and it uses a Mach-based microkernel with ELF executables (with symbols included).

Unlike OS/2 2.11, there was no release of OS/2 Warp 3 supporting symmetrical multiprocessing. A newer version supporting SMP was not released until OS/2 Warp 4.

An updated version of OS/2 Warp 3 called "OS/2 Warp Connect" was released in 1995, focussing on improvements towards the network capability, making it ready to connect to the Internet.