Sunday, November 11, 2012
Windows History: Episode 2 - Windows XP
Windows History: Episode 2 - Windows XP Video Clips. Duration : 7.37 Mins.
Like my video? - Check out my forums at www.benstechtips.co.uk We all loved Windows XP! Who didn't? Anyone who hated it needs slapping. Windows XP supported a whole bunch of new features! Unless you've been living under a rock, you've heard that Microsoft's follow-up to Windows 2000 Professional is Windows XP Professional Edition. In XP Pro, Microsoft has extended Win2K's code base to provide improved compatibility with Windows products. 10. The Luna UI—In XP, Microsoft continues its unabashed Macintosh copycatting. The new Luna interface uses a feature called WebViews to display a task-oriented UI. Although the XP UI looks a bit different from Win2K's UI, the new interface is similar enough so that your retraining costs should be minimal. It you don't like the Luna UI, you can restore the "classic" Win2K-style interface. 9. Improved hardware support—As you would expect, XP supports the latest and greatest hardware devices. XP gives you IDE support for ATA-100, CD-RW, DVD-RAM, and multiple IEEE 1394 (FireWire) ports. In addition, Microsoft will offer a 64-bit version of XP. 8. Application Compatibility mode—To better enable support for older applications, XP's Application Compatibility mode uses a database of known application settings. In Application Compatibility mode, you can specify which OS version to report to an application, and you can adjust various runtime memory-management settings. You'll be able to download updates from Microsoft's Web site. 7. Windows Image ...
Like my video? - Check out my forums at www.benstechtips.co.uk We all loved Windows XP! Who didn't? Anyone who hated it needs slapping. Windows XP supported a whole bunch of new features! Unless you've been living under a rock, you've heard that Microsoft's follow-up to Windows 2000 Professional is Windows XP Professional Edition. In XP Pro, Microsoft has extended Win2K's code base to provide improved compatibility with Windows products. 10. The Luna UI—In XP, Microsoft continues its unabashed Macintosh copycatting. The new Luna interface uses a feature called WebViews to display a task-oriented UI. Although the XP UI looks a bit different from Win2K's UI, the new interface is similar enough so that your retraining costs should be minimal. It you don't like the Luna UI, you can restore the "classic" Win2K-style interface. 9. Improved hardware support—As you would expect, XP supports the latest and greatest hardware devices. XP gives you IDE support for ATA-100, CD-RW, DVD-RAM, and multiple IEEE 1394 (FireWire) ports. In addition, Microsoft will offer a 64-bit version of XP. 8. Application Compatibility mode—To better enable support for older applications, XP's Application Compatibility mode uses a database of known application settings. In Application Compatibility mode, you can specify which OS version to report to an application, and you can adjust various runtime memory-management settings. You'll be able to download updates from Microsoft's Web site. 7. Windows Image ...
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