Compressed NTFS files are also supported."
something like Paragon Partition Manager 9.5 Professional boasts " Full read/write access to NTFS (Basic and all five types of Dynamic Disks) under Windows 95/98/ME, Linux and PTS DOS.
It should be of limited value (read that as "no value") in migrating dynamic volumes from a non-booting obsoleted windows 2000 pro or XP Pro system to say a Windows Vista/7/8 Home edition ON the working Home edition system as the Home edition systems are not suported or more that the home edition systems do not provide the underlying tools that this likely needs to mount and do the grunt work.
Also since this only supports the dydnamic disk configurations supported by the underlying operating system editions I suspect that this does not do much more than control the pre-existing OS functionality in a more user atractive GUI. There apears to be no mention of support for Windows Home Server. Or bring any of the existing Pro and above suported RAID features to Home edition desktop packages. Or to be abe to do the previously impossible like adding drives to an existing RAID 5 Array and resizing it. I don't see this as increasing the capability of the operating systems at all, it does not ADD previously unsuported features like RAID 5 support to desktop editions of suported operating systems, you still only get that on server class operating systems. And that none of the editions are licensed for technician use on client machines, but then again would be a pretty lightweight technicion to have to use pretty gui based dynamic disk managment front end over the built in tools.
I notice that most of these functions can be performed if you drill down to the correct built in module in windows especially in later versions of Pro and up windows. but on the last line flagged as New! it lists "Windows Server 2012 and Windows 8" as supported across all edition and an exra tick on the end where no edition column exists! oops!
In section Supported Operating System, the Pro edition excludes support for server based operating systems from 2000 to 2012 R2. I see strange and conflicting information in the chart under the Edition Comparison chart at URL