Cortana, Microsoft Edge and Windows Ink are just three new things added to Windows 10. However, there are many more new things added
If you are talking about versions. Ultimate is the best one you can have. Ultimate supports the most things.
Most personal computers, and especially laptops, are not advertised as being compatible with Windows server products, since they are not intended for the same purposes. In practice, most computers that can run Windows XP should be compatible with Windows Server 2003, but some things like power management (especially important in laptops) may not work correctly.
You will need to be a lot more specific about what problems you are having with your computer. Thousands of things can go wrong on a computer, especially one running Windows ME (which is notoriously buggy).
There have been 6 major versions. As of the time of this writing, the current stable release is Windows 7 (however, note that the internal version number is actually NT 6.1). Windows 8 (version NT 6.2) is currently in development. For most major versions, there have been a few "minor" versions. This was evident in the name up to Windows 3.x. However, commercial branding has made the less evident since the introduction of Windows 95, which shared the same major version number (which was 4.x) with Windows 98 and Windows Me, for example. Windows 2000, Windows XP, and Windows Server 2003 all were version NT 5.x. And finally, Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, and Windows Server 2008 are all version NT 6.x. To complicate things a little further, Microsoft started developing Windows NT, geared more toward business users, alongside the main line of Windows versions. This began with the initial release of Windows NT 3.1 in 1993. The Windows NT line was merged into (or, perhaps more properly, transformed into) the main line of Windows releases beginning with NT 5.1, also known as Windows XP. This was the first version of Windows NT to feature both Home and Professional editions, making it successor to both Windows 2000 (business oriented) and Windows Me (consumer oriented).
it does a lot of things
Yes, you can have different versions of Windows join a network together. For example, Windows XP and Windows 7 can commune together happily in the Windows Workgroup world. It may just take some finagling of security options, especially on shared folders to make Windows 7 show the files to Windows XP but that is easily accomplished.As for not being able to open or use certain types of data due to one OS being older than the other, other than Microsoft refusing to let Windows XP be able to install MS Office 2013, I haven't run into that problem yet. Besides, any MS Office 2013 document can be opened by any installation of MS Office 2010 and 2010 works just fine under Windows XP.So, if you need to network various versions of Windows together, go ahead and do so. If you need any assistance on getting some aspect of the network to work the way you have planned, drop me a line and I will see what I can do to help.
The word 'revert' is like the word 'restore', if you have multiple backups of a document, reverting to a previous version will load the older version, useful if you made a mistake in the recent versions of your work. The 'Undo' button on many programs is similar to reverting.
like what???
Drapes
because is important to update for new things or new versions
The box things look like a window or you can ask to Bill gates..
It's a software program where you can do alot of things Mac is nothing compared to Windows.