If you are upgrading the network operating system chances are you are upgrading the entire server, because the NOS is usually a piece of the operating system itself. For 'pure' network operating systems such as NetWare, it is similar to upgrading the operating system.
There is no standard "time" to upgrading anything, since every installation is different and different requirements. There are steps one must take before upgrading, including having a plan which includes backups and verification, plus parallel implementation.
The simple answer is that the time it takes to upgrade the software is minimal if you don't plan anything in advance and have no plan to revert if something goes wrong.
How long it takes after you turn the computer on to be able to use it.
Any operating system that you can run on a desktop can run on a laptop as long as the hardware requirements are met. Installation procedure is similar to the one on a desktop. This applies to Windows, Linux and Mac
What is known as LVNV Funding has not been operating for a very long amount of time. What is called LVNV Funding has been operating since the year 2007.
Yes, as long as the operating system provides 32-bit libraries. 64-bit editions of XP and Vista provide these by default. Most Linux distributions do not (since most of their programs are free and can be compiled to 64-bit anyway), but will offer the libraries in their repository.
With out one, the computer would not know what to do. You would not be able to interact with the hardware that makes up a computer. Picture it this way... Without an operating system the computer would be as lost as a someone who is stuck on island that crashed there via plane and has no recollection of how they even got on a plane or how long ago they crashed, with no GPS, phone, or contact with anyone or anything outside his little bubble of existence.
Yes, as long as there is an available slot and a driver for the operating system on that machine.
Simply a novel can be defined as it is a long narrative piece of literature or long narrative writing but in prose form
The computers should still be able to communicate with each other, regardless of whether or not they are all using the same operating system, as long as all of the computers are on the same network.
That depends entirely on what type of upgrade you are performing and your proficiency in doing so. Upgrading the amount of RAM in a system can be done in less than two minutes by a skilled technician. Upgrading the video card will probably take five to ten minutes. A motherboard upgrade will probably necessitate reinstalling the operating system, and require over an hour to perform.
POSIX stands for Portable Operating System Interface..
Almost all modern day operating systems support peer to peer networking, and are usually the standard network protocol after a new installation.
Vista can network with other operating systems, as long as they support Samba.
No, as long as you do not replace the hard drive. The hard drive is where all of the operating system files and other files are stored. Memory also called RAM is used only to make the computer faster by storing highly used files on them until the computer is turned off.
no as long as it has the same operating system it will be fine
yes
Routers are not aware of what is connected to them. Any network device can be attached as long as it has an network interface and can use the IP protocol. The answer to your question is that you do not need a disk, you only have to insert a network lead into the Router then plug the other end into the Mac. The Mac Operating System will deal with the technologies.
Of course you can upgrade it as long as there is an update. But why upgrade it?