There is no direct support for Publisher (.pub) files on a Mac. Depending on your needs (and budget) Pub2ID (See links below) converts Publisher files so they can be imported to In Design. Publisher can export to a PDF file which can be read but not edited on a Mac.
Scribus has an import Microsoft Publisher feature. Scribus is available on Mac OS X: http://wiki.scribus.net/index.php/MacOSX_version_of_Scribus Answer is incorrect. According to the Scribus for OS X manual: "Is there or will there be a Microsoft Publisher importer ? There is none and very unlikely to be provided by the Scribus Team. As with Indesign and Quark Xpress, these file formats are undocumented. They are difficult and sometimes impossible to reverse engineer. We would note that even users of different versions of Publisher have difficulties saving or opening .pub files on different versions."
Yes. Publisher 2003 should be able to open older Publisher files from Office 2000, 97 etc.
For your book files, you should choose a program to open your files. On Mac as iBooks is a built-in reading app, I recommend you iBooks. Maybe you can have a look at reading epub on Mac.
The FujiFilm J12 can be connected to a Mac with the supplied USB cable. Either Fuji's own supplied software or the Mac's Image Capture or iPhoto software will be able to read the camera's JPEG picture files.
PCSX and PCSX2 are the emulators available for MAC computers. These files help the MAC computer read the PS2 games and run them effectively on the computer.
Formatting the drive would remove any files currently on it. If you want to access a Linux file system from Mac OS X, there are a few programs that can do this, such as Paragon ExtFS for Mac OS X or ext2fsx.
Most USB Flash drives in Windows are formatted using the FAT or FAT32 file systems. These file systems can be read and written on a Mac. if you use NTFS on the drive, however, the Mac will not be able to read them without additional software.
The Mac can read files of any type from any media that the PC can. If your Mac does not have a built in disk drive of the right type, buy a USB drive and plug it into a USB port on the Mac.
Mac OS X has supported reading NTFS volumes since 2003 (Mac OS X 10.3 Panther).
iso files for mac computers
You can rely on a Mac speed up program. It helps optimize your Mac performance by cleaning large files, duplicate files, universal binary files, cache & temporary files, language files and other unneeded data.
A CD/DVD disc: It will depend what is on the disc. If there are files (Text, Video, Audio etc.) that the Mac can read then you can open them on the Mac. A hard disc: It will depend how the disc is formatted. Some will work. Some will be read only. Some will need reformatting to a Mac friendly format with Disk Utility.