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When Windows Vista and 7 create volumes, what type are the first three you create
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Basic disks use normal partition tables supported by MS-DOS and all Windows versions. A basic disk contains basic volumes, such as primary partitions, extended partitions, and logical drives. If you have any volume sets, stripe sets, mirror sets, or stripe sets with parity, you must back them up and delete or convert them to dynamic disks before you install Windows XP Professional. A basic or dynamic disk can contain any combination of FAT16, FAT32, or NTFS partitions or volumes. The disadvantage of a basic disk is that you are limited to creating only four primary partitions per disk or three primary partitions and one extended partition with logical drives. Windows NT based systems can support striping and software RAID sets for basic disks but Windows 2000/XP/2003 do not.Dynamic disks are supported in Windows XP Professional, Windows 2000 and Windows Server 2003. Dynamic disks do not use partitions or logical drives. Dynamic disks were first introduced with Windows 2000. With dynamic disks you can create volumes that span multiple disks such as spanned and striped volumes, and you can also create fault tolerant volumes such as mirrored volumes and RAID 5 volumes. Dynamic disks offer greater flexibility for volume management because they use a database to track information about dynamic volumes on the disk and about other dynamic disks in the computer. Windows Server 2003 can repair a corrupted database on one dynamic disk by using the database on another dynamic disk. With dynamic storage, you can perform disk and volume management without restarting Windows.Dynamic disks are not supported on laptop computers or on computers with Windows XP Home Edition installed. The number of volumes that you can create on a dynamic hard disk is only limited by the amount of free space available. Windows XP Pro, Home or 64 Bit Edition does not support mirrored or RAID5 volumes.You can use both basic and dynamic disks on the same computer system.
You don't the last version of windows to use the ERD was windows 2000
Videos made in Windows Vista will not work in Windows XP because the formats used to create the newer version of a WMM project are not available on the older version of XP.
how many users we can create with window 7 ulltimate ultimate 32 bit version
The extra unused 8 MB is for the creation of dynamic disks in Windows XP. Although not usable in the Home Edition, dynamic disks in the Professional Edition, as well as Windows Server 2003, are used to create software RAID setups.
That depends on the error you get. Most likely you do not have permission to create/copy files into windows XP volumes. You can use "Security" to grant required rights.
To createa text file in Windows XP or any version of XP, open any word processor or text editor and create your file. Once you create your file, save it with the .TXT contention to save it as a text file.
Quite a few softwares can do that. Windows Xp & Vista Media Player can. Version 11 is current.
Search for "Create & Share" at the Intel website www.intel.com if you have Windows 98/SE. If you have Windows 2000/XP, you have to buy and install the Upgrade CD from www.shop-intel.com after downloading the Win98 version. Good luck