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Generally speaking, no. Binaries compiled on PureDarwin can be run on Mac OS X, but most applications (with the exception of some command-line tools) use libraries like Carbon or Cocoa that aren't available on PureDarwin.
If you have Mac OS 10.5 (Leopard) Photo Booth can be found in the Applications folder.
In reference to installation CDs or binaries, Universal refers to its ability to run on both PowerPC and Intel-based Macs. PowerPC binaries can only be run on Intel Macs via emulation, which can be quite slow.
Macs use an operating system called Mac OS X which will not run applications written for the Windows operating system. Microsoft produce a Mac OS X version of Word for Apple's Mac computers. There is the option of installing the Windows operating system on a MacBook alongside Mac OS X which allows Windows applications as well as Mac OS X applications to be used.
Click Finder Click Applications Click Photo Booth
It is in your Applications folder. If you still can't find it, use Spotlight or Finder.
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.
Windows, mac os, Linux
Tradition dictates that after a fresh install of Mac OS X on a new Mac you open a Finder window (from the first icon on the left of the dock at the bottom of the screen) Select the Applications folder. Find PhotoBooth in the list of applications. Double click on PhotoBooth's icon. Mess about with the whacky wonderfulness that is PhotoBooth.
Mail. It's in the Applications folder.
The Mac's Garageband, iMovie etc. applications only work with Mac OS X. There is no Windows version to work on other PCs.
PhotoBooth was part of Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard) which replaced version 10.4 (Tiger) at the end of 2007. PhotoBooth can be found in the Applications folder of a Mac running 10.5 or later.