Yes OS X supports P2P protocols and many other common protocols to windows, so there should not be a problem as long as you have compatible software.
false
Yes -- Mac OS X makes networking and file sharing as simple to set up as Windows 7.
Yes.
No, Mac OS X was never release as free product. The latest version of Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard costs:Single license: 29$Family Pack (5 licenses): 49$NOTE: All versions of Mac OS X found on internet (P2P networks or direct downloads) are illegal copies and should be avoided.
Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard) and all earlier versions of Mac OS X will support networks.
Yes, Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard ships with Java support.
None
You cannot without erasing your hard drive and installing Mac OS 9 from scratch. Even then Mac OS 9 may not run on modern Mac hardware because Mac OS 9 needs the ROM chip to boot. Modern Mac OS X hardware uses EFI to boot the system instead of a ROM chip to boot. Mac OS X v10.0 - Mac OS X v10.4 support Mac OS 9 applications and can run them, you just need to install the Mac OS 9 compatibility program which can be found on the Mac OS X Install CD.
Mac OS X can only be installed on Apple hardware so Vmware is unable to support Mac OS X on anything other than a Mac by running, for example, a virtual installation of Mac OS X Server on a standard Mac OS X machine. Conversely Vmware's Fusion allows the running of Windows, and other operating systems, on an Intel Mac running Mac OS X.
Mac OS 9 software requires Mac OS 9, which was discontinued in 2002, to work. Early versions of Mac OS X came with Mac OS 9 included (referred to as Classic mode) which could be activated from System Preferences. The latest versions of Mac OS X no longer support Classic mode. It will depend upon your specific Mac model whether a version of Mac OS 9 can be persuaded to work.
Win98,win2000,and winXP support IEEE 1394.
The Huawei E1756C supports only Mac and Windows OS.