Yes you can - I've answered my own question as I've just done it!
By means of an external drive, linux and windows are different OSes, but you may use those very same files in both. If you are using the same computer with a dual boot you may use, again, an external drive or just browse windows folder after mounting it in your linux OS.
For the same reason Linux binaries don't run in Windows. 1. They are structured completely differently. Linux uses ELF format; Windows uses PE format. 2. They use different methods of memory management. 3. The applications will likely rely on external libraries that simply won't be found on another operating system.
The drive is formatted for the Mac. You need to take the information off the harddrive, then format it for PC and reload the data. Im dealing with the exact same issue right now but my question is how to get the PC to view the external harddrive through the network as a volume. I can see the Mac and its contents, but how do I get to the drive? suggestions?
Generally, stakeholders are external. If an employee is at the same time a stakeholder of the company he works for, then he is both internal and external.
If you install on the same partition where your current OS is, seven will move everything in the folder "Windows old", everything else will formatted (only on the same partition).
They were both made at the same time. They are basically the same
A new floppy disk can be formatted using the FORMAT command in DOS. The same tool is available in Windows using the Format utility in 'My Computer'.
No. They both use the same desktop paradigm, but Windows 98 integrated Internet Explorer into the desktop shell.
Not sure, but you can just select AVI format, it's essentially the same thing.
both are same
Windows XP and Windows 7 both use the same file system by default: NTFS.
They both share same kind of interface and basically functionality.