For Servers the graphical desktop is not installed automatically; it has to be explicitly added after the Server software/OS has been installed.
For Windows, a special stripped down version is known as Server Core. For Server 2008 Server Core cannot have a graphical desktop but for Server 2012 you can add it later.
show version
Depends on the kind of interface you get. If it's a command-line interface, you'll generally get the name of the distribution, the kernel version, and on a second line, a prompt for the username, and then upon entering the username, it will prompt for a password. (which is masked and you won't see any kind of output indicating the length of the password) If it's graphical, it will be handled by the greeter of your distro's display manager.
From the command-line if you call java with the -version argument then it will display the version number.> java -versionjava version "1.8.0_111"Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_111-b14)Likewise, if you list what programs/applications you have installed then the list should include the version number.
receiving a malformed packet
Nope. You can't slow down or speed up video on Windows Live Movie Maker since it is a stripped-down version of the program that lacks many features/functions and display tracks that the 2.6 version has.
Just type in your command line this: java -version If you have the java installed in your machine the above command show you the version installed.
cat /proc/version The above answer will only work on certain systems. For most Unix systems, use the 'uname' command to get the Unix version. AIX uses the oslevel command.
Running "java -version" will display the current version of Java.
The BACKUP command is used to backup in DOS 6 plus version.
gcc --version
You can use "ver" command.
You can use "ver" command.