With a maximum partition size of 2 GB, there is barely enough room for Windows XP, let alone any additional programs and user documents on a FAT16 file system.
Windows XP only recognizes FAT16, FAT32, and NTFS partitions. If it is not one of these (such as ext3 or ReiserFS), it will report it as an "unknown partition."
Windows Xp Professional.
If you are installing windows XP with Windows 9x or me than the I would recommend you to use FAT32 as if you use NTFS than you wont be able to access Windows XP with NTFS partition. If you are installing Windows XP with Windows NT or Windows 2000 than you can use any partition type. But I would recommend to use NTFS.
Windows XP natively supports FAT12, FAT16, FAT32, and NTFS. Other file systems, such as HPFS, JFS, ext2/3, and ReiserFS can be supported through an IFS (Installable File System).
NTFS is the predominant file system although FAT is supported on XP.
Yes, you can. When installing W7 over an XP OS you will have the choice to keep them both.
Windows XP is the best choice.
Yes. Windows XP and Windows Server 2003 have similar codebases and identical hardware requirements. No. Windows Server 2003 is much more expensive than even a copy of Windows XP Professional. It provides no added features that a typical desktop user would want to make use of, and is not particularly user friendly by default. Certain applications that run on Windows XP may not run properly on Windows Server 2003.
Windows XP is a general name given to sevearl operating systems released by Microsft in the early 200's. These include: Windows XP Home, Windows XP Pro, WIndows XP Stater, Windows XP Media Edition, WIndows XP Tablet, Windows XP N, Windows XP K and Windows XP KN
Safe Mode in Windows XP is a boot choice that loads a limited amount of drivers. It give programmers and repair people the opportunity to check for problems in the OS.
No, but you can get Windows Live Mail for Windows XP in Windows Live Essentials for XP.
Purchase Windows XP