No way
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XP is very out of date and no longer officially supported. You will find it increasingly difficult to find proper security patches to maintain your computer. The PowerEdge is designed to be a server. Putting in XP wouldn't make much sense.
No
The four most popular and best selling servers as of December 2012 are the Buffalo TerraStation Pro, ProLiant N40, Dell PowerEdge T410 and the QNAP TS-219.
Dell Venue Pro was created in 2010.
Windows Pro is not a operating system.
Some people can run pro tools on the Dell Inspiron 1520 and some have issues. It is best to contact dell support.
Windows IT Pro was created in 1995.
The Dell Venue Pro is a Windows-based phone with a sliding touch screen and full QWERTY keyboard. The 5 MP camera and LED flash and full messaging capabilities add to this smartphone's appeal. Stay busy with the built in Microsoft Office Mobile and XBOX Live games.
That depends on exactly what brand of computer you have, and what operating system was originally installed on the computer being, "wiped" and the computer the Dell disk came from. There are two types of Windows besides the whole Home, Pro, Ultimate etc., Retail and OEM. If the registration information for Windows that came with the computer is going to be reused, and the computer was running the same OS as what is on the Dell disk, in most cases I think that the system will allow a complete reinstall of Windows. If the computer was not running an OEM version of Windows and never has, the Dell Disk would not be able to install properly. A retail version of Windows should be able to be installed on any system that it legally can be installed on that meets the minimum system requirements.
Yes.
yes
No, Final Cut Pro is only compatible with macOS and not Windows XP.
After Windows Seven, The newest one coming out is Windows Seerophine and then Seerophine Pro X.