You get a copy of the mspaint.exe file from Windows XP, and move it to your Windows Vista computer.
You can use most versions of MS Word and MS Excel with Windows Vista. The versions mostly associated with Vista are MS Word 2007 and MS Excel 2007.
No. The Windows Vista installer loads a stripped down version of Windows Vista on which the setup program runs. MS-DOS is not used for any component.
No.
the meaning of ms paint is microsoft paint because windows does not have it when you get your computer
the meaning of ms paint is microsoft paint because windows does not have it when you get your computer
Yes they are
Disadvantages: • Very basic editing capabilities • Windows only • Does not support layers
Windows PE
It supports some dos commands. Use start->run->cmd to check this out.
There's no such thing as "MS Paint 2003." If you meant the Paint program from Windows XP and Windows Server 2003, yes. Just copy the program from a Windows XP or Windows Server 2003 installation to your Windows 7 installation.
There isn't actually any such product as Office Vista; Office 2007 was released at the same time as Vista so it is associated with it.Windows Vista is an operating system, Office is an application that, in principle, runs on several operating systems - you can buy Office to run on Apple OSX and Windows mobile as well as on regular Windows. Also, although Office 2007 is associated with Vista, it will run on older versions of Windows (for example, Windows XP).
Yes, in the sense that it is part of Windows.