Plug & Play
Plug and Play - for those studying in a college level introductory to computers. I know this question is arguable (as most of them are) but the people that provide who created this "college level material," are probably more concerned about profit rather than educational ethics.
No, you do not need to adjust the BIOS when installing an operating system. However, you can set the BIOS to determine the order in which attached devices will boot. That capability allows you an option (one of several options) to install different operating systems on different devices and choose which operating system boots when you start the computer.
There's no hard limit on the number of operating systems you can install. The limit will be dictated by the number of operating systems that support your hardware and the amount of space on your hard drive(s).
If one or of the operating systems does not cooperate well with dual-booting (such as Windows with a Linux distribution), then you should install the troublesome operating system first. If both are well-behaved (such as two Linux distributions) then it does not generally matter.
Using an install dvd, there is usually an option to format
Plug and Play - for those studying in a college level introductory to computers. I know this question is arguable (as most of them are) but the people that provide who created this "college level material," are probably more concerned about profit rather than educational ethics.
Plug and Play - for those studying in a college level introductory to computers. I know this question is arguable (as most of them are) but the people that provide who created this "college level material," are probably more concerned about profit rather than educational ethics.
Plug and Play - for those studying in a college level introductory to computers. I know this question is arguable (as most of them are) but the people that provide who created this "college level material," are probably more concerned about profit rather than educational ethics.
Not all devices are completely "plug and play" on all operating systems. For those devices that your computer's operating system does not automatically recognize it will be necessary to install the driver software for the device. Unfortunately driver software for some devices is not available on every operating system.
Windows XP does not automatically install NetBEUI, as Microsoft considers it a legacy protocol.
No. It is expensive to install solar energy devices and farms, but operating costs are very low.
It's called plug and pluy (PnP).
A serial infrared transceiver
No, you do not need to adjust the BIOS when installing an operating system. However, you can set the BIOS to determine the order in which attached devices will boot. That capability allows you an option (one of several options) to install different operating systems on different devices and choose which operating system boots when you start the computer.
Yes PLUG N PLAY features in Operating Systems enable automatically configuration of adaptor cards and other peripherals as users plug or install them.
Install Operating Patches and Install Hotfixes.
To properly install a webcam on an HP PC will depend on the camera. If teh driver for the webcam does not install automatically when it is plugged in then the user will either need the disc that came with the camera or find a download that is supported by the operating system.