I don't about any OS, but using Firefox web browser you can use zoom function.
Just go to menu
view>>zoom
XHTML support is based on the browser being run, not the underlying operating system. Any operating system capable of running a modern browser can thus use XHTML. There are dozens of systems that would meet this definition.
Answers.com is web page, not applications meaning that it works under number of operating systems, which has support for web browser.
Gmail is not an operating System but a website. It opens up on a Browser in case on PC's. These browser's run on Operating Systems.
Vista can network with other operating systems, as long as they support Samba.
ACPI Function
The 'speed' of your browser can depend on the speed of your internet connection. However, Safari is probably the best since Safari was made for the Mac.
Most modern operating systems (Windows, Linux, Unix, mainframes) support SSH and SSL.
The Camino browser runs on OS X operating system. However in May 2013, the Camino organization announced that the bowser is not being developed anymore.
Because they are operating systems! These operating systems (and others) support web browsers which are applications that run on the operating system.
The systems were in place to support the new process. The new systems were not operating properly.
A browser window is what appears when you double-click on the icon for the web browser
The operating systems that I have found it to support are dependent on the version that you download. There are versions that date back to 2005 which is when it was first released. Most newest ones from 2009 and up support chrome.