Most Linux OS's walk you through dual booting. Choose your prefered Linux OS and burn it to a disc and run it. You could also partition your hard drive from the XP side and create a space for your Linux OS to run in. If you are new to Linux, it is recomended to run the OS without actually installing it, that way you can get the feel of Linux without completely installing it.
you can run it with virtualbox
No, only Mac and Windows XP (and newer)
Install XP Install VMWare Client. If your CPU is 32-bit, get version 3. Download a Linux .iso Run VMWare to create a virtual machine running Linux Dual boot is old school.
There is no such thing as "Linux XP". If you're referring to Windows XP, then the answer is no. As far as Linux distributions, for the majority of distributions, they are free (as in freedom) and free-of-charge.
Wine won't work because of the DLL problems..... Get windows? Xp
iPod and WindowsPer Apple support "requires Windows 2000 SP4 or Windows XP". I have not gotten my iPod to work on 98se but did get it to work on WinME. Works on all Mac's (I have OS 8 - 10.4), and Slackware (Linux).
Technically speaking, Windows XP does not run at all on the PS3. The videos you may have seen were of people running Windows XP inside QEMU, an emulator, on Linux. Running XP in an emulator is very slow, and not at all usable for games.
You can install and run Microsoft Office in Linux, yes. You will need to install it separately, however; you can't just run the programs off your Windowspartition in Linux.
Linux XP is a shareware Linux distribution which seeks to offer a user interface similar to Microsoft Windows XP. Unlike most Linux operating systems, Linux XP is offered as a 30-day trial after which the OS will disable itself until it is registered. It is currently owned and being developed by the Trustverse company based in Moscow, Russia.
Before you format xp you will need to go onto Linux and create a grub boot disk by typing grub-install /dev/fd0. This will create a floppy disk which you can use to start Linux after you have removed and reinstalled xp. After removing and reinstalling xp use the disk to get back onto Linux and use grub-install /dev/hda to restore the Linux boot screen.
Windows applications have no implicit purpose in a Linux system. They are not at all necessary for it to run. Unless you have Wine, an application binary layer to run Windows programs, they aren't even usable.