Windows ME relies on the BIOS for hard drive support, so it is somewhat more dependent on the BIOS. Computers built before 2002 do not support hard drives larger than 137 GB (127 GiB). If your BIOS does support it (in which case, why aren't you running a more modern operating system on it), you will require a third-party patch for Windows ME to access parts of the drive beyond the LBA48 limit.
With two reserved drive letters (A and B), Windows ME can support a maximum of 48 TB, using 24 partitions, each 2 TB in size. This is highly impractical, of course, and FAt32 is highly inefficient on anything above 32 GB.
256 TB.
256 tb
137 gb
4.
Five policies that are supported by Vista and 7, but not XP are Windows Defender, Windows Security Center, BitLocker Drive Encryption, Parental Controls, and User Account Controls. All versions support Windows Firewall.
Yes, Active Directory, NTFS permissions, and the Distributed File System (DFS) are supported in Windows Server 2003. However, BitLocker Drive Encryption is not available on Windows Server 2003; it was introduced later in Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008. Thus, while the other features you mentioned are supported in Windows Server 2003, BitLocker is not.
No. Only Windows XP is supported; Windows 95/98/ME/2000 are not supported and are not planned to be in the future.
RAID 1, RAID 0+1, RAID 5 and 6.
The Hard Drive with Windows Vista installed on it would not work in Windows 98 unless you reformatted it using the FAT32 File System, thus erasing all data. Windows Vista uses the NTFS file system, which is not supported by Windows 98.
Windows 98 supports FAT filesystems only. Windows XP supports FAT and NTFS filesystems.
Windows 2000 was the first