Yes. The SATA internal hard drive in Vista can be turned off, by turning off the feature in system BIOS.
Any type of Flash drive can be used in Windows Vista.
The Windows Vista technology that supports a hybrid drive is called ReadyDrive.
open CD drive insert windows vista disk and run it
If that is what your operating system is installed on, yes.
Yes, you can order the multiple set of Vista CD's from Microsoft after you purchased the Vista DVD, Windows vista comes on a single DVD and one recommended hardware requirements for Vista it's a DVD Drive.
No. Vista ruins all windows(non-vista) and RAIDed partitions.
The Toshiba U3 will work on Windows Vista. Just plug it in and Windows Vista will find the drivers automatically for it.
Yes, you can delete windows 7 by formatting your drive, but all of your files will be gone. If you have two hard drives, you can either copy your data from one drive to the other or put xp/vista on the second one and use the windows 7 drive as a slave.
You can not simply downgrade to Windows XP from Windows Vista. If you want to completely remove Windows Vista in favor of XP, you will have to format the hard drive and reinstall the OS from scratch. Windows XP will not install on top of an existing Vista installation.
No. Windows Vista is not based on DOS and a DOS boot disk will be unable to read the file system that Vista is on.
Install Win XP on the first hard drive, then install Vista from Xp and on question about "what kind of installation do you want to have?" Answer "separate" installation. When it asks you "which hard drive are you going to use?" Choose the second one. Vista will create a boot list automatically.
If it has the minimum RAM and hard drive space, you can.