To format a CD-RW with Windows XP, one has to install third-party CD/DVD authoring tools as the OS does not provide an inbuilt program for this. Examples of these tools are Nero and Roxio.
restart the whole computer & if i dosnt work see a computer fixer.
As long as they use the same data connector, yes. However, you will likely not be able to use the hard drive, as Windows XP will not usually work when transferred to another computer, and Windows Me cannot read the NTFS file system. Reinstalling Windows XP or formatting the hard drive in Windows Me will resolve these respective issues.
No, you cannot use a Windows "Program" (application) on a Mac. If it ends with .exe then it can only be opened/used with a Windows OS. And no you can't use an Apple OS program on a Windows OS. You can now use Apples "Boot Camp" program to make a partition on the Mac computer to use a Windows OS now. Or you can use something like Parallels, VM Ware, etc, to "emulate" a Windows OS on a Mac.
Computer programs cannot think, therefore Windows XP cannot provide an opinion on itself.
The best way - is to start Windows in 'safe mode'. If you start in safe mode, Windows ONLY starts the programs essential to getting the computer started. Once you have your windows screen, run a good anti-virus program. The program will either delete the malicious software, or isolate it so it cannot cause problems with other software and files. Once the program has finished - restart in 'normal' mode.
Click on: Start, Computer, Local Disk (C:), Program Files. Scroll down to Windows Live Essentials folder. Open it and click on the Program Icon to initiate it.
windows xp is an operating system for a computer and cannot be downloaded.
Right click on the file and select "open with" and then "choose program"
No, Windows 7 CANNOT be used on any computer. Windows 7 can only be used on computers that have 3 gigabytes (gigs) of RAM.
Windows live essentials is a 'suite' of programs. Windows mail is part of that suite and cannot be downloaded as a separate program.
Only computers running Windows NT or later can have a computer account in a Windows Server 2008 domain; Windows 9x computers cannot. Since Windows 98 came out after Windows NT, the answer is yes. -Brandon
No, a cookie is a text file. A cookie can be read as a resource by a program but, on its own, it cannot execute.