* Jason Polak <[email protected]> [08-07-20 15:10]:
> 
> 
> On 8/7/20 8:17 AM, Anton Aylward wrote:
> > On 06/08/2020 03:36, Peter Schlaufer wrote:
> >> When I now would change to Linux I would have to reformat the SSD drive to 
> >> fat32
> >> that it can be read and written in Linux.
> > 
> > Linux can read and write a large number of file systems that are faster and 
> > more
> > reliable than FAT32.  The only reason I can think of for using FAT32 on 
> > your SSD
> > is to be comparable with Microsoft Windows or cameras, phones and tablets 
> > that use
> > it on their removable media.
> > 
> 
> Indeed. As someone who sometimes uses multiple operating systems, all
> the solutions for a shared filesystem seem to come down to FAT32 or
> exFAT if you want something to pass between Linux, Windows, and OS X.
> NTFS seems the next logical candidate. ext4 would be okay too for OS X
> if you buy the Paragon software extension, though I loathe that solution.
> 
> I really wish there were one modern filesystem for sharing data,
> including support for disk-wide encryption, that were supported across
> all three systems. I mean it's 2020!

yes, it is 2020:
  Ext2Fsd is a Windows file system driver for the Ext2, Ext3, and Ext4
  file systems. It allows Windows to read Linux file systems natively,
  providing access to the file system via a drive letter that any program
  can access. You can have Ext2Fsd launch at every boot or only open it
  when you need it.

  
-- 
(paka)Patrick Shanahan       Plainfield, Indiana, USA          @ptilopteri
http://en.opensuse.org    openSUSE Community Member    facebook/ptilopteri
Photos: http://wahoo.no-ip.org/piwigo               paka @ IRCnet freenode
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