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Less options = Less problems
One of them is that Mac OS X is made by Apple and Windows is made by Microsoft.
Not sure how to answer but Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows, 2000, XP, VISTA, 7, MACOS, Ubuntu and others.
Windows, MacOS, and Linux are the most common.
Of course not. For windows, windows 10 is the latest... For Mac, macOS High Sierra 10.13 is the latest...
The Microtek ScanMaker 1000XL Flatbed Scanner is compatible with Apple MacOS X, Microsoft Windows 98SE/2000/ME/XP, as well as Apple MacOS 9.x.
Platform-dependent (Windows, Linux, AIX, MacOs etx), but gcc seems to be a safe bet.
yeah it can use vista or these other Apple MacOS, Microsoft Windows Vista / 2000 / XP
Cisco Connect is the Windows/MacOS application that is used to configure and manage the Cisco Home Networking (Linksys and Valet) products.
If you installed the Windows Support Software (Boot Camp drivers) from Apple then either go into the Control Panel folder or into the Task Bar and open the Boot Camp control panel and select the MacOS and then select restart from that menu.If you didn't then you will have to restart and press and hold down the Option key immediately after the start up chime and it will eventually get to a Boot screen with any bootable partitions, select the MacOS and click the "continue booting" button and it will finish booting into the MacOS.
You don't run macOS applications on Linux unless there's a Linux port. As far as Windows goes, there is Wine. Do note that it's not an emulator and it won't run perfectly with everything.
Macs are designed to function best with Mac OS X and the associated iLife software (iPhoto, iMovie etc.) but they can happily run Windows or Linux. Rather than change a Mac to the another operating systems you can run Windows using an emulator (Xp, Vista and 7 - use "Sandbox"). But for professionals that want more out of excellent hardware, Linux has tools for most - without the need for "Appstore". So, i run MacOS one one partition, have installed "REFIt" that enables triple boot: MacOS, Windows and Ubuntu Studio. I have installed some more eyecandy Ubuntu, music and video editing software, and this can access the MacOS HFS file system - and even fix it (install all the "hfs" tools). But things that I like, such as the Docking, is installed, but the top, shared menu line that changes for the window that is active, has been replaced by a "Windows-like" menu. The "ext4" filesystem is aparently more robust than hfs. There are some issues with the using the journalling in hfs from Linux, so be careful. Otherwise, things like email should be able to use the same files. I can "see" all my MacOS files from Linux, and all the Windows files - and when I need a MacOS tool, it is just to reboot and run MacOS - or Windows (this is usually just emulated in "Wine"/"Vm").