I think it can be connected in a peer to peer setup. Connect through a hub/switch or any networking. and proceed normally.it should work.anyway XP home can't be connected to a domain.
what are the differencies between wind.7 home prenium and wind. 7 pro.?
its the network driver for win xp pro
Windows XP Pro, XP Home edition, XP media center edition, XP tablet PC edition, XP pro x64
Set up a "Home Network"
If you upgraded it should write over the existing Windows program (XP Pro). As you may know, XP pro takes over 1 gig of space. I am not sure on the amount of space that XP home edition takes up.
Windows XP Home & Windows XP Pro
Xp comes in following versions. >starter >home >professional >mediacenter >64 bit ver >tablet PC editions
Yes, you can.
Yes
Yes and no... Windows XP came out with more then one version. The XP versions are Windows XP Home Edition, Windows XP Professional and Windows XP Home 64bit Windows XP Professional 64 bit, Windows XP Media Center. When they say SP1 that just mean that it has the Service Pack 1 updates installed. All three versions of XP can have SP1 but still are not the same operating system software. XP Home is a basic OS for simple tasks most users need the operating system to perform. XP Pro is a advanced OS that allows a used to configure the operating system to their requirements. XP Pro and Home x64 is only for computers that have at least a dual core processor(64 bit systems.) This version is exactly the same, a little bit faster and more expensive. It is also better at multitasting
Windows XP is a general name given to sevearl operating systems released by Microsft in the early 200's. These include: Windows XP Home, Windows XP Pro, WIndows XP Stater, Windows XP Media Edition, WIndows XP Tablet, Windows XP N, Windows XP K and Windows XP KN
XP Pro is a 32 bit OS that is made for single core processors. XP Pro 64 is a 64 bit OS that is made to be used on computers with at least a dual core processor.