There is no iMac format or Windows 7 format. Photos stored on the iMac and a Windows 7 pc are in the JPEG format. Either computer can read this format.
If you're on a Mac, Flip4Mac offers many products that allow you to export a movie in a Windows Media Format. See the related link.
Providing the Mac is a recent model with an Intel processor you could make a Mac into a Windows only machine or you could partition the hard drive and have both Mac OS X and Windows as options.
WinSCP is a ftp, scp and sftp client that is make for Windows, not Mac. However, there are several alternatives available for the Mac that perform the same function very well.
Computer aplications for Windows are in the .exe file format; for Mac there are in the .dmg file format.
No, you would have to change the mac operating system over to windows.
A Mac is a computer and Windows is an operating system so it is impossible to change one into the other. If the Mac has an Intel processor you can downgrade it by installing the Windows operating system. You can use the Boot Camp utility (in the Utilities folder within the Applications folder) to partition your hard disc and install Windows so you can use both Mac OS X and Windows.
You cannot.
yeah but theres a certain format u need to make it
The Mac can read Windows NTFS formatted volumes, but can not write to them. The thumb drive is most likely formatted with NTFS. The best format for a volume that will be used to copy files between Mac and Windows is FAT32.
Xlaunchpad makes the a windows based format operate as a Mac based format. You need to install the app, run it, and then drag and drop shortcuts where you want them.
You cannot run Mac on Windows XP. But you can run Windows on Mac
Any computer that has windows built in can run windows and open office. I have personally tried this before on my old computer, as it came with open office. So basically, any computer. Even a mac can be re-programmed by an expert to use the windows format, but it can't use mac tools. It would literally be a windows computer in a mac's body.