It must.
Windows NT4 Service Pack4 and Windows XP Professional
Windows 95 (partial, via USB add-on) Windows 98 Windows ME Windows NT 3.1 Windows NT 3.5 Windows NT 3.51 Window NT 4 Windows 2000 Windows XP Windows Server 2003 Windows Vista Windows Server 2008
NetBSD, Windows, and Linux each support both FAT and NTFS file systems.
* Windows 95 (only in later OEM releases) * Windows NT 4 (only with a third party driver) * Windows 98 * Windows Me * Windows 2000 * Windows XP * Windows Server 2003 * Windows Vista * Windows Server 2008 * Windows 7 * Windows Server 2008 R2 * Most Linux distributions * Mac OS 9 * Mac OS X * FreeBSD * NetBSD * OpenBSD * FreeDOS
caching
Out of the box usb support..
Support for Secure digital (SD) Memory Cards
No. Windows XP does not support rolling back to a previous operating system, nor is it possible to upgrade directly from Windows 95 to Windows XP.
Planning: Determine resources needed for deployment. Execution: Implement the deployment plan by installing and configuring systems. Monitoring: Track progress and address any issues that arise during deployment. Closure: Verify successful deployment and transition to ongoing support.
Boot to a virual DOS environment is not a feature of winPE. Windows Imaging format, Size reduction, Customization, Hyper-V Support, and Scratch Space ARE new features of winPE 3.0
Help and Support centre, accessible from F1 or the Start menu.
The file systems supported by Windows XP and Windows Vista are essentially the same. However, Windows Vista does not support booting from FAT32 partitions, and Windows XP does not support Windows Vista's Shadow Copy feature (which makes automatic backups of files) and will delete the backups if it accesses an NTFS Windows Vista partition.
Windows 98 has no built-in support for NTFS. This is not a problem, but a missing feature.
On the client side, you must set the VPN type to IKEv2 or it won't work.
Presumably the question pertains to Portrait mode. Windows XP does not feature native support for Portrait mode. However, your video card's driver should include a Control Panel which will either auto-detect, or allow the user to switch to Portrait mode, if the monitor supports it. If the monitor does not support Portrait mode then feature will likely not be available. There is no way in Windows XP to rotate a document independent of the orientation of the screen.
Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 7 will support Microsoft 2010.
Windows 98, Windows 2000, and Windows XP all support USB