Older Windows systems required three letter extensions, and so in the infancy of the Web, pages that were served by such systems had to use .htm. In fact, the three letter extension is so ingrained in many Windows/DOS users, that it is still seen pretty regularly. Unix and Macintosh (and indeed Windows post version 3) do not have this limitation, and so can handle four letter extensions (as well as three letter extensions).
Remember that what matters is the server, not the local system on which the pages are viewed. Windows 3. X users can still browse pages with four letter extensions.
It's only Windows 3. X servers that wouldn't be able to serve such pages (nor would designers using Windows 3. X be able to create pages with four letter extensions).
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