XHTML support is based on the browser being run, not the underlying operating system. Any operating system capable of running a modern browser can thus use XHTML. There are dozens of systems that would meet this definition.
Vista can network with other operating systems, as long as they support Samba.
All modern browsers support XHTML.
Most modern operating systems (Windows, Linux, Unix, mainframes) support SSH and SSL.
Because they are operating systems! These operating systems (and others) support web browsers which are applications that run on the operating system.
The systems were in place to support the new process. The new systems were not operating properly.
No. It may be formatted different on certain operating systems and only the operating systems running off of the central operating system that it was built on will support it.
The operating systems that I have found it to support are dependent on the version that you download. There are versions that date back to 2005 which is when it was first released. Most newest ones from 2009 and up support chrome.
The Dtop app currently supports iOS, Android, and H5 (HTML5) mobile operating systems.
There's no hard limit on the number of operating systems you can install. The limit will be dictated by the number of operating systems that support your hardware and the amount of space on your hard drive(s).
The operating systems that support GnuCash software are: Microsoft Windows XP, Vista and 7, Mac OS X and Linux Fedora, Mandriva, Redhat/Centos and Ubuntu.
it either 1,2,3 or 4
XHTML is designed to do everything HTML can, only better. It complies with XML parsing systems, rather than systems based off of the Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML); this allows computers to read webpage documents (or anything written in XHTML) more accurately and with more speed.