I have an (external) 250GB dist with one (1) partition wich is FAT32
yeah I know this kills the capacity (about 10% is wasted becouse of the cluster size) but it's the easiest way to transfer files between multiple systems / OSses
Printable View
I have an (external) 250GB dist with one (1) partition wich is FAT32
yeah I know this kills the capacity (about 10% is wasted becouse of the cluster size) but it's the easiest way to transfer files between multiple systems / OSses
This article explains all the issues with FAT32 and larger partition sizes.
http://www.win2000mag.net/Articles/I...rticleID=38803
Basically Fat32 can support up to 2TB partitions at 4GB files. However, Win2k and XP will not format anything larger than 32GB. So you have to use Win98 or ME to format the drive to a size larger than 32GB.
thanx guys for for the responses... i didn't know this...
@ the end i just made the partition 25 gigs in fat32... it's simply the easiest way to transfer files among diff. OS's
Why don't you just use a NTFS partition? It works great for me, running XP and Red Hat. I havn't had any problems.
Yeah, I know that fdisk is just used to make partitions, but I was thinking that maybe somehow he didn't enable large disk support, and thought maybe it had a negative effect somewhere else.Quote:
Originally posted here by Und3ertak3r
not to be a smarta$$.. but..
the "large disk support" they talk about in fdisk is hdd's larger than 640Mb.. used it a few time on 600 and smaller drives.. but fdisk isnt the prog that formats the hdd..it just the tool tp partition the hdd.. well mainly anyway..
cheers
Fat is the drive you need to use if your doing stuff with windows ME or below, but if your using Windows NT, 2000, XP, Your a lot better off using NTFS.
Don't take this advice instantly as I am only an amateur but maybe you could split it into 2 partitions then you may be able to use fat