Mac OS X has built in support for most HP printers.
Most peripherals will work with both a Windows system and a Mac system. Mac OS X has built in support for most popular printers, scanners, cameras etc. Most name manufacturers provide Mac software for their peripherals if there is no built in support.
Yes.
Almost all the printer company's have jumped on the Mac platform so yes, Lexmark is compatible.BUT....As with any manufacturer not all models are Mac compatible so you should go to the printers web support site to see if they do have Mac drivers.The Mac has basic printing features, called "Plug and Play", but you may have to go to the printers web support site to get the latest pinter drivers for your particular printer model to enable all the options.It can take from weeks to months to get the new drivers for the next upgrade in Mac OSX. Windows has the same issues.If you have an older printer the printer manufacturer may not keep making updated drivers for every OS upgrade so make sure they have the drivers for all your older devices before upgrading any OS, Mac or Windows.
false
Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard) and all earlier versions of Mac OS X will support networks.
Most modern printers with a USB connection will work with both Macs and Windows computers. yes it does just always use epson or hp printers install the CD online for mac. that's what i did
Yes, Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard ships with Java support.
None
You cannot without erasing your hard drive and installing Mac OS 9 from scratch. Even then Mac OS 9 may not run on modern Mac hardware because Mac OS 9 needs the ROM chip to boot. Modern Mac OS X hardware uses EFI to boot the system instead of a ROM chip to boot. Mac OS X v10.0 - Mac OS X v10.4 support Mac OS 9 applications and can run them, you just need to install the Mac OS 9 compatibility program which can be found on the Mac OS X Install CD.
Mac OS X can only be installed on Apple hardware so Vmware is unable to support Mac OS X on anything other than a Mac by running, for example, a virtual installation of Mac OS X Server on a standard Mac OS X machine. Conversely Vmware's Fusion allows the running of Windows, and other operating systems, on an Intel Mac running Mac OS X.
Mac OS 9 software requires Mac OS 9, which was discontinued in 2002, to work. Early versions of Mac OS X came with Mac OS 9 included (referred to as Classic mode) which could be activated from System Preferences. The latest versions of Mac OS X no longer support Classic mode. It will depend upon your specific Mac model whether a version of Mac OS 9 can be persuaded to work.