The simple answer is "yes."
But unfortunately, many files created on one machine may not open properly on the other. This is not the user or the computer's fault but the software manufacturer's fault. Common files such as .txt and .jpg are easily read by all types of computers but opening very specific files may become complicated. You may want to change how the file is saved on one computer so the other can open the file more easily.
An Apple computer will do everything a Windows computer will do.
An Intel processor Apple Computer.
No it is a Windows PC. Apple computer run the OSx operating system which is currently called Snow Leopard.
DOS is not part of an Apple computer, it is part of all Windows PCs.
Windows is the operating system on a Microsoft computer or an Apple computer running windows drivers. Without windows your computer would not work.
If the CD contains photos or music they will work on a Mac. If the CD contains a Windows program it will not run on any Apple computer.
Windows is an operating system produced by the Microsoft company. Windows is not a computer or a company. The first Apple computer was sold in July 1976. The first version of Microsoft's Windows operating system was sold in 1985.
The same uses as any other computer. Apple computers will do everything a Windows computer will do and in some case do it better. Graphic Designers, and Photographers use Apple computers because they tend to display graphics much better than a Windows computer.
Most Apple software is designed to work on their Mac OS X operating system and will not work on a computer running the Windows operating system. Apple does make some of their software available for Windows such as iTunes and their Safari browser.
Because Windows Vista is just too old to handle modern iPhones properly. Here’s what’s really going on: iPhone doesn’t fully support Vista drivers anymore New iOS versions don’t play nicely with Vista’s outdated USB/photo import system. Autoplay depends on “device recognition” Vista often fails to detect the iPhone as a proper camera (PTP mode), so Autoplay never triggers. Missing Apple Mobile Device driver Without newer iTunes/Apple drivers, Vista can’t communicate correctly with the iPhone. “Trust This Computer” step matters If you didn’t unlock the iPhone and tap Trust, Vista gets blocked immediately. Bottom line: It’s not your iPhone — it’s Vista being outdated. What actually works: Install the last compatible iTunes version for Vista (12.1.3) Use a USB cable + unlock iPhone + tap Trust Or skip Autoplay and manually open DCIM folder in “My Computer” If you want a smooth experience, honestly… upgrading Windows is the real fix.
No. if you have an apple computer you can have windows xp but windows xp computer can not run apple sorry dude
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