Windows 98 SE
Windows NT workstation
windows xp home edition windows 98 windows NT 4.0 workstation windows 2000 professional
The two operating systems are not compatible with each other. There were so many errors in Windows ME that the system cannot be simply upgraded by over writing the program. Windows XP Home Addition or XP Pro Addition must be installed on a clean drive.
No. Server editions of Windows cannot be upgraded to Home versions and vice versa.
Well, Windows 7 Professional comes with, "XP Mode." "XP Mode" is a program installed Windows 7 Professional where you can use XP on a Windows 7-upgraded/Windows 7-installed PC or notebook.Windows 7 Home Premium, and Windows 7 UltimateDO NOT come with "XP Mode."
The only operating systems that run "SimCity Societies" include: Windows Vista Home Edition, Windows Vista Professional, Windows Vista Media Center Edition, Windows 7 Home Premium, Windows 7 Home Edition, Windows 7 Professional, Windows 7 Ultimate, Windows 8 Home Edition, Windows 8 Home Premium, Windows 8 Professional, Windows & Ultimate, and last but not least the: Mac OS X Snow Leopard.
Windows XP Home & Windows XP Pro
No works with only the operating systems Windows XP Professional or Windows XP Home Edition.
The Open Home operating system does not exist and no results can be found for it. The main operating systems are Windows, Linux and Mac OS. An open home operating system may be a computer without an operating system.
An Operating system is a software that controls the computer's hardware and softwares. In Windows, there are many operating systems, such as: -Windows 10 -Windows 8.1/8 -Windows 7 - (Continues to older versions) -Vista/Xp/Home Basic/Xp Professional/2003 etc.
Essentially there are three that Microsoft still makes available for general home use: Windows 7, Windows Vista and Windows XP.
Microsoft Windows Operating Systems (XP and VISTA) are the most heavily used today.
It is one of the many releases of Windows operating systems, and the first of the Windows 9x family (which is targeted towards consumer/home use) up until the release of Windows XP which merged the 9x and NT families into "tiers".