Wine can be executed from a terminal with the command wine application.exe, substituting application.exe with the name of the program you want to run. You'll have to either supply a pathname or change your working directory to where the program is located.
Yes. Windows GUI application are the tipical examples, their execution starts with 'WinMain', not 'main'
Winnt32.exe
In a workspace, there are program windows. Consider whole GUI of MS Windows to be a single workspace.
GUI stands for "graphical user interface". An example of a GUI would be Windows XP/Vista, both are interactive and have icons, start menus, desktops, etc. A computer without a GUI will usually be text-based, meaning only text is shown on the screen and no icons or desktop. Note that a GUI is not linked to the computer itself and is usually linked the OS or a program.
The GUI of Windows NT 3.1 to 3.51 is virtually identical to that of Windows 3.1. They use a Program Manager, rather than a Start menu and taskbar. Windows NT 4's GUI is similar to that of Windows 95. However, it lacks some facilities like the Device Manager (since NT 4 is not truly Plug 'n' Play). Unlike Windows 98, Internet Explorer is not integrated into the shell, although it is optionally available.
GUI is used in almost everything, so it's kinda hard to explain it... the task bar on Windows is an example of a GUI, the header of a Internet Browser is a GUI, etc. Every interacting form of a program or game is a GUI, its function is used for user interaction with the program, so it's used for almost anything Hope it helped.
Windows 3.0 is not a version of Windows available for the Windows Vista GUI. Any version of Windows before Windows 2000 are also not available.
Take a look at the Windows Calculator.
Becuase It has GUI. (everything you click on!)
GUI is Graphical User Interface, which is what you see whenever you load a program. A "super-easy" GUI would be an easy-to-understand program.
To do it from a command line: Open a Terminal window and use the unix "rm" command. To do it with a GUI: Download and install the muCommander program (very similar to Windows Explorer, but for the Mac).
A GUI, or graphical user interface is only part of a program. It is the part that the user sees, when it's not a console application. For example, your mail program, FireFox or Internet Explorer are both GUI program because you do not use them in a console mode. Windows to has a GUI, and it's what you probably use to get around with your computer. Google Web Creator, now changed for Google Sites is a browser based website hosting and creating service. It is not a GUI, as it is browser based and a website creator, but it has a easy to use WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) editor to create websites.