- <h3 class="SECT2"><a name="WHICHOS" id="WHICHOS">2.2. Which operating
- systems are supported?</a></h3>
-
- <p>At present, <span class="APPLICATION">Privoxy</span> is known to run
- on Windows 95 and later versions (98, ME, 2000, XP, Vista, Windows 7
- etc.), GNU/Linux (RedHat, SuSE, Debian, Fedora, Gentoo, Slackware and
- others), Mac OS X (10.4 and upwards on PPC and Intel processors), OS/2,
- Haiku, DragonFly, ElectroBSD, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Solaris, and
- various other flavors of Unix.</p>
-
- <p><span class="APPLICATION">Privoxy</span> used to work on AmigaOS and
- QNX, too, but the code currently isn't maintained and its status
- unknown. It might no longer compile, but getting it working again
- shouldn't be too hard.</p>
-
- <p>But any operating system that runs TCP/IP, can conceivably take
- advantage of <span class="APPLICATION">Privoxy</span> in a networked
- situation where <span class="APPLICATION">Privoxy</span> would run as a
- server on a LAN gateway. Then only the <span class=
- "QUOTE">"gateway"</span> needs to be running one of the above operating
- systems.</p>
-
- <p>Source code is freely available, so porting to other operating
- systems is always a possibility.</p>
+ <h3 class="SECT2"><a name="WHICHOS" id="WHICHOS">2.2. Which operating systems are supported?</a></h3>
+ <p>At present, <span class="APPLICATION">Privoxy</span> is known to run on Windows 95 and later versions (98, ME,
+ 2000, XP, Vista, Windows 7, Windows 10 etc.), GNU/Linux (RedHat, SuSE, Debian, Fedora, Gentoo, Slackware and
+ others), Mac OS X (10.4 and upwards on PPC and Intel processors), Haiku, DragonFly, ElectroBSD, FreeBSD, NetBSD,
+ OpenBSD, Solaris, and various other flavors of Unix.</p>
+ <p>But any operating system that runs TCP/IP, can conceivably take advantage of <span class=
+ "APPLICATION">Privoxy</span> in a networked situation where <span class="APPLICATION">Privoxy</span> would run as
+ a server on a LAN gateway. Then only the <span class="QUOTE">"gateway"</span> needs to be running one of the
+ above operating systems.</p>
+ <p>Source code is freely available, so porting to other operating systems is always a possibility.</p>