Yes, Windows 7 allows for multiple gadgets to be on the desktop at the same time. The group policy settings are in the area called Group Policy Object.
On a Mac you can have many windows open for an application, you can have several applications running at the same time (depending on how much memory your Mac has) on a desktop and you can have several desktops. The multiple desktops feature is called Spaces (see link below) on a Mac.
No. They both use the same desktop paradigm, but Windows 98 integrated Internet Explorer into the desktop shell.
Browser tabs allow you to have multiple web pages at the same time, without juggling multiple windows on your desktop. Each open web page will appear as a “tab” at the top of your web browser window. You can click the tabs to switch between your open web pages.
The same way you do on a Windows 7 desktop.
To minimize all open windows on the screen, you can use the "Show Desktop" icon, which is typically located in the bottom-right corner of the taskbar on Windows. Alternatively, you can press the "Windows key + D" keyboard shortcut to achieve the same effect. On macOS, you can use the "F11" key or the "Mission Control" gesture to show the desktop.
No you can have multiple depending on which browser you are using.
you go to your desktop then goto the rightside corner on the botton goto settings then goto personalization and then its the same as windows 7
Windows Vista and XP don't allow multiple users to log on at the same time. Linux, Windows 2000, Windows Server 2003 and Windows Server 2008 allow multiple network users to log on remotely via Remote Desktop. Hardware is available that allows multiple monitors, keyboards and mice to be connected to a machine and multiple users to log on, but generally it is awkward to use, slows the computer down and causes problems with graphics drivers.
The app store in desktop form is really the same, yes, but the apps that are compatible woth your desktop may vary from the ones you can find in the mobile applet.
The program Windows Desktop Search, as it was known on Windows XP, was a default program on all Windows XP computers that searched your computer for files with a given keyword. The program is now called Windows Search but still does the same basic function.
The same uses of any Windows desktop computer on the market today.