you can't directly. use dosbox or wmware (virtualization) with win3.1 or any 32 bit os.
Yes.
Yes.
I previously posted that Organizer does not run under Vista, but that answer was incomplete and misleading. It turns out that it does work on the 32-bit Vista platform, but not on the 64-bit Vista that I'm running. Sorry for the confuion.
Every Windows Distribution is writen in binary non Open Source files. By the way, there are different versions of Windows Vista: Windows Vista 64-bit and Windows Vista 32-bit. Windows Vista 64-bit or x64 can work with 64-bit AMD Processors.
Yes it works fine.
No you can't because 64-bit won't run on an x86 (32-bit) PC. You have to have the x86 version.
Only Windows 64-bit operating systems can run 64-bit applications
The 64-bit version of Windows Vista is designed to take full advantage of 64-bit processors, and can address more than 4 GB of RAM. 32-bit applications can still be run on it; however you will need to make sure that there are 64-bit drivers for your hardware.
I doubt there's any way to really quantify "worst." Windows NT running on non-Intel architectures could only run certain MS-DOS programs under emulation, and 64-bit versions Windows XP/Vista/7 cannot run 16-bit applications at all. 32-bit versions of Windows Vista and 7 can run 16-bit Windows applications, but MS-DOS programs are limited to text mode.
The maximum RAM that Windows Vista Ultimate can recognise is 4GB, as long as you have the 32-bit edition. If a 64-bit edition is being run then up to 12 GB RAM can be supported.
Yes. But only if it's Vista or 7; it won't run on XP or below.
Yes, and no. On certain versions of Vista, it will run fine. On some, it seems to not be able to run in DirectX 9. It'll run on any other DirectX level, though.