yes
No, but most of Linux software can be run on other systems since most of them are portable.
NetBSD, Windows, and Linux each support both FAT and NTFS file systems.
Windows 7, Vista, XP Home/Pro, 2000, Server 2003, Server 2008 Linux kernel 2.6 has native ipsec support, so about all modern Linux versions will support it OpenBSD, NetBSD, FreeBSD, and Dragonfly BSD currently support it Mac OS X
Several are, actually. Both Linux and NetBSD are highly portable and are available for about 2 dozen architectures. Although not quite as portable, FreeBSD is available for about 7 architectures. OpenBSD supports 16 or 17. Plan 9 supports 6.
Yellow Dog Linux is the only operating system officially endorsed by Sony. However, the necessary support for the PS3 hardware has already been integrated into the Linux kernel, so almost any PowerPC version of Linux can be used. The other popular choices are Ubuntu, Debian, and Fedora.
Linux has drivers built in already for portable media. Many times with Windows, you have to download drivers from 3rd party sources.
Importance Of Unix-support multiuser and multitasking.-adaptability and simplicity.-flexible file system.-excellent network environment.-portable.- provide better security.
It is possible to boot MS-DOS or Linux from a USB Flash drive, but not all computers support doing it.
No, but most of Linux software can be run on other systems since most of them are portable.
No, ext2 does not have journaling support. This wasn't added to ext until ext3.
Hat aphase support the Linux version?
Linux Support Team was created in 1993.
Some of the topics that are covered in the Linux support forums are installing Linux, general questions and answer about Linux, as well as basic configurations.
Linux shell is a programming language. its fully different from others progrmming language. the script which is used in Linux quite tough to remember if we comparison to other programming laguages.
Yes. Linux is fully supported by Java.
Yes.
Linux distributions can support hundreds of thousands of devices and programs, far too many to list.