Well it could be a couple of things depending on what you did. Did you partition your hard drive and then load Linux or did you just load Linux. Need more info, The PC Doctor, mattie289404@gmail.com. What is suppose to happen is you partition your hard drive, which will give you two hard drives. One with Windows and one with Nothing. Then you load Linus on the new hard drive. If done correctly then when you boot your computer it will ask you which drive you want to enter.
Both Windows and Linux can be installed on an Intel Mac, so yes. If you were referring to binary compatibility with Mac OS X, Windows programs can be run using third-party programs like Wine or CrossOver Mac. Programs compiled on Linux are not binary-compatible, but most programs that are open-source and not specific to functionality in Linux can be and have been ported to Mac OS X. Most of these are available via Fink.
Yes, if the program is open source.
Windows can only open files if you have the program associated with that file type installed.
"Linux is a computer operating system, like Windows." "Linux is an OS, but the code for it is open source, meaning it is available to anyone and can be manipulated by any user."
Linux Wine is an open source software program. The Linux Wine software program allows Linux users to run Windows programs on their own devices such as computers.
Both Windows and Linux hosting is powerful. If you use ASP or .NET then you should use Windows hosting platform. If you do not, then you can use the more affordable and more popular Linux hosting platform.
you can try putting silicon where it leaks i did this to my Truck with a sunroof i put silicon on the top but the con about this that i cant open the sunroof
You can use OpenOffice.org on Linux to open and edit Microsoft Office documents. OOo includes clones of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and other Office apps. Abiword will perform a similar job, though only for Word, I believe. Both are available for Windows and Linux and maybe more. If you use those same apps on Linux, then your docs will be usable in Windows as well. This is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of compatibility between Windows and Linux. There is much more!
Linux is an operating system, like Windows, that runs on the Linux Kernel, which is based off of UNIX.
Yes. Windows 7 is a system distribution in the Windows family built around Microsoft's proprietary NT operating system. Ubuntu is also one of many Linux distributions built around the open source Linux operating system.
Linux is a operating system, just like Windows and Mac OS. Unlike Windows and Mac OS Linux is free and open source. Some popular Linux distributions include, Fedora, Redhat, Ubuntu, Centos, and many more. If you would like to play around with linux try downloading a virtualization program and installing Linux on it.
Ubuntu is an operating system and it is an open source software. This software could be installed on many devices including laptops, smartphones and tablets.