It affects most distros with a 2.6 series kernel prior to 2.6.33. Most distros have already released a fix, so this is a non-issue in a modern system. A comprehensive list of all distros that used an affected kerenl is impractical or impossible.
Two operating systems are; Windows, and Linux.
There are no "joined" Linux and Windows operating systems, so there is no name for them.
Anything. Expect DOS, old versions of Windows,Almost all Linux systems. There is a problem - Most of these systems are unknown on internets. Linux systems are completely free - just download and install. But they are unaffected by hackers, backdoors, most of viruses. Hope that helps. Unknown.
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There are programs you can download that will read Linux file systems. Common file systems are ext2 and ext3.
You need to include the names of the Operating Systems if you want a answer, because there are hundreds of different Linux variations.
Linux is a modern operating system kernel used by GNU/Linux systems like Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Debian, OpenSuSe, Fedora and many other. Linux is mainly used for servers and embedded systems, but is gaining popularity in desktop system market.
No.
YES
If by computer systems you mean operating systems, then: 1) Windows 2) Macintosh 3) Linux
Linux is a monolithic kernel. Some operating systems with a microkernel use Linux as a process for providing drivers, but this is irrelevant to mainstream Linux.
unix and linux systems are true multi user (root + others) but in windows admin and main user are same !