That is ur wish type it as long as u can then the file name is that long in windows & is this a question of absolute Necessity
Any file name can not contain /, \, *, ?, :, |, ", < or >..
A PKG file is not compatible with any windows based PC as it is a Mac installer file.
Well it would help if the question was a bit more specific but... in say Microsoft word i could change the files name by doing a save as, this would not only allow me to set the file name but also the format that i would be saving the file in and where i want to save it. In say windows explorer (just having a file open in Windows) you can right click on any file and select properties and from there you can select and change the file name, extension format. also in windows explorer i can change the file location by simply copy/cutting it from one location to another. Sorry for the long answer but try to be specific to program and situation...
It is any media file, Windows Media Player can play.
XP and 7 supports file sharing through network or any Windows supported storage device.
To createa text file in Windows XP or any version of XP, open any word processor or text editor and create your file. Once you create your file, save it with the .TXT contention to save it as a text file.
There are thousands of games that run on Windows 98. With the proper codecs installed, virtually any type of media file can be played on Windows 98, as long as the computer is technically powerful enough for it.
"CON" is a reserved DOS device name, along with "PRN", "AUX" and "NUL".
The Windows NT operating system is full of issues. The fact they do not have specific server file is one of them. Any file can be converted to a server file.
Any FAT and NTFS.
You can edit any type of video as long as its file name extension (format) is one compatible with Windows Movie Maker:asf, .avi, .dvr-ms, .m1v, .mp2, .mp2v, .mpe, .mpeg, .mpg, .mpv2, .wm, .wmv
Windows virtual memory does not reside in any one file. Virtual mmeory is actually a system that virtualizes all access to memory and provides a consistent environment that is independent of the size of RAM. Paging occurs to many different files, not just the pagefile. By default the pagefile name is "pagefile.sys" and resides in the root of the system drive. Both the name and location can be changed. In A+ Guide to Managing & Maintaining Your PC Sixth Edition, Page 59 of Chapter 2 "What an Operating System Does" You will find it says: "The data is stored in a file on the hard drive called a SWAP file or PAGE file. The Windows 2000/XP swap file is Pagefile.sys, and the Windows 9x/Me swap file is Win386.swp."