Windows, on the other hand, supported a much larger variety of hardware.
Windows does not support them, for example.
Actually, I'd be a little surprised if Windows didn't already support this.
I sure wish Windows would support hard & soft links better though.
(By the way, Windows 98 supports two active monitors with one computer.)
Windows 7 fully supports this feature by dynamically switching from one device to the other when needed.
This limit is "theoretical" because neither current 64-bit x86 processors nor Windows support quite that much.
Yes, Windows supports handwriting recognition and an on-screen keyboard, but these aren't well integrated into applications.
Windows supports the ability to replace the Windows shell with another program.
Windows 8 will support the use of Windows Live credentials to log in.