Officially a 233 mhz processor but with a few twists and turns (Figurative not literal) you can get it all the way down to 7 mhz
As an absolute, that may never be known. Officially, Windows XP requires a 233 MHz Pentium processor. Experiments conducted by various people have run Windows XP on processors underclocked to just 7 MHz.
Officially, Windows XP requires a minimum of a 233 MHZ Pentium processor. Unofficially, with a minor patch or via hard drive swapping, any Pentium processor can be used.
Yes.
No. Windows XP will not run on a computer with a 486 processor.
No. Windows XP is an operating system. Microsoft Word is a word processor.
XP Home Edition is limited to one processor DIE. It can have any number of CORES. XP can see all of the cores of a Core 2 Quad, for instance. Even if the system in question had two separate die, or chips, XP would still work. It just wouldn't be able to use the second processor.
No.
Windows XP Professional x64 Edition
Windows XP 64-Bit Edition.
Windows XP runs on any x86-compatible processor starting with the Intel Pentium.
Windows XP 64-bit Edition.
Yes