Windows 2000 was the first
Windows XP supports spanned and striped RAID 0 volumes Hardware RAID is considered a better solution for fault tolerance than software RAID RAID 0 does not provide fault tolerance
Yes.
RAID 1, RAID 0+1, RAID 5 and 6.
RAID 2 and RAID 3.
Windows Server 2003 and later versions, including Windows Server 2008, 2012, and 2016, support the creation of RAID 5 volumes using dynamic disks. However, RAID 5 is not available in the standard versions of Windows desktop operating systems, such as Windows XP or Windows 10. For desktop environments, users typically need to rely on third-party software for RAID 5 configurations.
Any. You should have appropriate drivers for your hardware RAIDs. And during win Xp installation process when it asks to install drivers for SCSI devices (Press F6) and install drivers for your hardware RAID. Vista has native support for many RAIDs so it doesn't require specific drivers. Raid 0 is the correct answer and that includes simple, spanned and striped
Yes, if you have RAID drivers that will work under Windows 2000.
Raid implemented by Hardware is more stable than RAID implemented by Windows
RAID 1
RAID 0.
Dynasty warriors strikeforce= English version of Multi Raid Multi raid= ...multi raid
The answer depends on whether one is looking to configure RAID via hardware or software. Windows is capable under disk management to run RAID via software. The first step is to convert to a dynamic disk. Then the RAID levels supported, in parentheses are Striped, 2 disks (0) Mirrored, 2 disks (1) Striped with parity, which required 3 disks (5) being the three most popular. That said if RAID is being done at the hardware level, then the operating system is oblivious to the fact that it is being raided at all and simply reads what the RAID controller tells it to. In this scenario all RAID levels are suported. For a deeper discussion on raid levels the following site is excellent. http://www.acnc.com/04_01_00.html