yes it does
You can configure windows to use Offline Files Sync which keeps a copy of the file from the server locally so that you can continue working if the connection to the server is lost. See the links below for more information
Any file system; file sharing does not depend on the underlying representation of bits on disk. Windows server 2003 should be using NTFS anyway, which is what you want to be using. For more information on windows file sharing, look up 'SMB' and 'CIFS'.
The file systems supported by Windows XP and Windows Vista are essentially the same. However, Windows Vista does not support booting from FAT32 partitions, and Windows XP does not support Windows Vista's Shadow Copy feature (which makes automatic backups of files) and will delete the backups if it accesses an NTFS Windows Vista partition.
A swap file is space on a hard disk used as virtual memory. It is an extension of a computer's real memory (RAM). It allows the computer's operating system to have more RAM than you actually do.
Well it would help if the question was a bit more specific but... in say Microsoft word i could change the files name by doing a save as, this would not only allow me to set the file name but also the format that i would be saving the file in and where i want to save it. In say windows explorer (just having a file open in Windows) you can right click on any file and select properties and from there you can select and change the file name, extension format. also in windows explorer i can change the file location by simply copy/cutting it from one location to another. Sorry for the long answer but try to be specific to program and situation...
You can find out more information about Windows XP activation on the official Microsoft website. You can also find out how to activate your copy of Windows XP on the manual included with your copy of Windows XP.
Internet access.
You can try File Expert, a file management app on Android phone. Open File Expert and find the picture you want to copy, tick it and click More Choices button at the bottom. Then you can copy or move it to anywhere you'd like to on your phone.
Depends on which operating system you are using and whether you want to copy more than one file. In DOS/Windows command prompt "c:\copy xxxx /destination_folder/" if more than one file you can use "c:\copy xxx.* /destination_folder/" Xcopy has more options (verify, copy subdirectories ..) and is used "c:\xcopy xxx* /s /destination_folder/" In Unix/Linux/OSX cp is the command for copying as in "#darkstar$cp -R *.txt /destination_folder/" cp has a lot more option than xcopy but you will need to type either "cp --help" or "man cp" to get the best of cp's actions.
Then you have more files on your computer, and less available space.
more command
NTFS