It stands for 'original equipment manufacturer'. It's not just applied to computers.
* Windows 95 (only in later OEM releases) * Windows NT 4 (only with a third party driver) * Windows 98 * Windows Me * Windows 2000 * Windows XP * Windows Server 2003 * Windows Vista * Windows Server 2008 * Windows 7 * Windows Server 2008 R2 * Most Linux distributions * Mac OS 9 * Mac OS X * FreeBSD * NetBSD * OpenBSD * FreeDOS
Windows XP is an example of an OS. Windows Vista is an example of an OS. Windows 7 is an example of an OS. Mac OS X is an example of an OS.
No. The Pocket PC OS is a custom version of Windows CE developed by Microsoft. It contains APIs and applications that are not included in Windows CE 3.0 itself. Likewise, Windows CE contains components that are not included in the Pocket PC OS.Pocket PC devices do not all use the same Pocket PC OS, either. OEMs who build these devices make custom versions of the Pocket PC OS to add features specific to their devices. Thus, a Pocket PC device from one OEM might include different applications or device drivers than a Pocket PC from another OEM.
OEM. eg. Dell OEM Windows.
The OEM license.
It's sort of a misnomer, actually. It means that it is compatible with OS X and Windows.
yes windows is a multiuser OS
Windows XP :-)
The OEM license.
- OEM versions cannot be used to directly upgrade from an older Windows
I assume OS means Operating System ... in computers. Here are some Windows PCDOS Dr DOS MSDOS
A custom installation is any installation that modifies the default settings of the Operating System (OS) as specified by the OS publisher/developer.These modifications are usually made by an Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) who is including the Windows OS on a computer system of their design/manufacture. In some cases, the OEM can also contract with "Third-Party" software publishers/developers to include additional software on the OEM computer system, which can be optionally chosen by the user/purchaser on first log-on, or preselected by the OEM when the computer system is built.In the case of the Windows Vista OS, as created by Microsoft Corp., a custom installation can include the following changes (and more not detailed here):modification of default system settings (such as language/keyboard settings; desktop screen resolution; desktop wallpaper; screensaver; etc).inclusion of hardware-specific driver software that was not included in the base Windows Vista OS.inclusion and/or selection of alternative web-browsing, media tools, or system tools as default software (Safari or Chrome instead of Internet Explorer; Real Player or iTunes instead of Windows Media Player; etc)