Yikes, the currently accepted answer is over-complicated. Here's how to get the version of the current windows (with build numbers) quickly and reliably without requiring manifests and other nonsense tricks. And works on Windows 2000 and newer (i.e. every version of Windows in existence).
I am running SketchUp on a Mac but like to run it in parallel Windows instead because I will also be running Aspire software. When I open SketchUp in windows with parallel, I still get the Mac version. How do I get the Windows version through parallel?
Fill out your profile so we know what Mac OS and what hardware you are on. Have you downloaded the windows version of SketchUp and installed it on the partition of the drive that you have allocated to parallels?
I did at one time run SketchUp in parallels but that was years ago. It was not fantastic.
Partners and other interested parties with questions or concerns regarding these materials or the revision process with Version 7.0 can contact Doug Anderson, EPA, Anders...@epa.gov. To be added to the contact list, stakeholders are encouraged to contact win...@energystar.gov with their contact information. The proposed program requirements, including the specification, and additional information will be available below.
Version 22H2 also introduces a third way of initiating snap assist on Windows 11. In addition to the drop-down snapping menu that appears when you hover over window controls and the ability to drag app windows to the far left or right of your screen, version 22H2 adds a new "snap bar" menu that drops down from the top middle of your display whenever you grab an app window to move it.
The other methods of snapping apps are still here with the 2022 update; you can drag an app window to any edge of your display to initiate side-by-side snapping, or you can hover your cursor over an app windows' maximize button to see your available snap layouts too.
The actual tab functionality is a little barebones right now. For example, you can't drag tabs between File Explorer windows like you can on most web browsers, and you also can't group tabs like you can in Edge. But the basic functionality is here and works as expected.
Windows 2.0 introduced overlapping, resizable windows with more flexibility. Soon after, Windows/386 was released for Intel's 386 CPU, which could run multiple DOS applications simultaneously (Windows 2.0 was renamed Windows/286). Windows was becoming more useful, and a handful of companies adopted it as an operating environment. See Windows 2.0.