yes, you can
you have 2 options:
-buy a mac version of office, or download a 30 day trial
-download a free alternative, such as NeoOffice (neooffice.org), which is openoffice ported to mac. it can read office files (including office 2007 docx, etc.) and openoffice files, and includes writer, spreadsheet, powerpoint, and some other stuff. there are other freeware office replacements as well, but I recommend this one
The 1969 macs should use windows....if not get the 69th generation apple mac.
Yes,Apple has a set of Windows drivers and software called Boot Camp to make Windows "see" the Apple hardware.As of 10.7 Lion you can only use W7 and above. Apple no longer supports, nor has drivers, for XP or Vista on Apple computers that came installed with Lion. Basically from late 2011 on.
No. iBooks use PowerPC processors, which are incompatible with Windows XP.
Yes, I use it for iTunes all the time.
virtual
apple
macbooks and apple computer use mac and dell, hp, samsung all use windows
Apple servers differ from Windows servers in a few small ways. They first off use completely different operating systems. They also have different interfaces for use.
Windows only........BUT..... If you have Windows 7 you can have Boot Camp (free) from Apple install it on your Mac and have the FULL hardware, processor, Ram, etc, just as if it was running on a Windows machine natively. Boot Camp is just a set of Windows drivers from Apple so the Windows OS can use the Apple hardware.
The same hardware any Windows PC can use.
Yes, of course. Iceland has a modern economy, like any Western European country.
No, you cannot use a Windows "Program" (application) on a Mac. If it ends with .exe then it can only be opened/used with a Windows OS. And no you can't use an Apple OS program on a Windows OS. You can now use Apples "Boot Camp" program to make a partition on the Mac computer to use a Windows OS now. Or you can use something like Parallels, VM Ware, etc, to "emulate" a Windows OS on a Mac.