Depends on who you ask. To the average computer user, they will say Windows as it is the dominant platform in the consumer, education, and in some places, enterprise sectors (usually for workstations). If you ask a system administrator or a scientist, they will most likely mention Linux as Linux runs on a majority of servers, clusters, and supercomputers for enterprise use and scientific research.
Windows XP is not in the direct upgrade path of Red Hat Linux 8.0. If you want to install Windows XP on a computer / server with RHL, you need to check the hardware specifications to see if Windows XP supports it.
No. MDaemon is a Windows-only product.
Unless you already have a free partition on your hard drive or an additional hard drive, you cannot install Red Hat Enterprise Linux without "disturbing" Windows; you will need to resize the Windows partition to make room.
CCProxy is a Windows application. It does not run natively on Linux and would be unsuitable for a production environment.
There is plenty of software which allows Linux to work with NTFS file system. For windows there is not as much. But I think Acronis "Backup and Recovery" allows you to read Linux file systems under windows.
red hat enterprise Linux is used as a server while red hat Linux is used as client..
Both Debian and Fedora are examples of Linux Other examples of Linux distros include: Ubuntu Centos RedHat BackTrack ... Some examples of different windows OS's are (In order of newest to oldest): Windows 8 Windows 7 Windows Vista Windows XP ...
Red Hat Linux was created on 1995-05-13.
both are different versions. rhel 5 has more features and inbuilt software..
No. Red Hat Enterprise Linux is simply a commercial Linux distribution primarily used for servers. It was never a nickname for Linux itself.
Red Hat Linux was discontinued in 2003, and replaced with "Red Hat Enterprise Linux", and the free, home-use version "Fedora". Updates were discontinued for Red Hat after 2006.
Initially it was just called "Red Hat Linux", but now Red Hat focuses exclusively on the enterprise market with its Linux distribution named "Red Hat Enterprise Linux" (RHEL) with the community version named CentOS (Community ENTerprise Operating System) and Fedora (a Red Hat-supported community Linux distribution)